De novo missense variants in LMBRD2 are associated with developmental and motor delays, brain structure abnormalities and dysmorphic features

Author:

Malhotra AlkaORCID,Ziegler AlbanORCID,Shu Li,Perrier Renee,Amlie-Wolf Louise,Wohler Elizabeth,Lygia de Macena Sobreira Nara,Colin Estelle,Vanderver Adeline,Sherbini Omar,Stouffs KatrienORCID,Scalais Emmanuel,Serretti Alessandro,Barth Magalie,Navet Benjamin,Rollier Paul,Xi Hui,Wang HuaORCID,Zhang Hainan,Perry Denise L,Ferrarini Alessandra,Colombo Roberto,Pepler Alexander,Schneider Adele,Tomiwa Kiyotaka,Okamoto Nobuhiko,Matsumoto NaomichiORCID,Miyake Noriko,Taft Ryan,Mao XiaoORCID,Bonneau Dominique

Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine the potential disease association between variants in LMBRD2 and complex multisystem neurological and developmental delay phenotypes.MethodsHere we describe a series of de novo missense variants in LMBRD2 in 10 unrelated individuals with overlapping features. Exome sequencing or genome sequencing was performed on all individuals, and the cohort was assembled through GeneMatcher.ResultsLMBRD2 encodes an evolutionary ancient and widely expressed transmembrane protein with no known disease association, although two paralogues are involved in developmental and metabolic disorders. Exome or genome sequencing revealed rare de novo LMBRD2 missense variants in 10 individuals with developmental delay, intellectual disability, thin corpus callosum, microcephaly and seizures. We identified five unique variants and two recurrent variants, c.1448G>A (p.Arg483His) in three cases and c.367T>C (p.Trp123Arg) in two cases. All variants are absent from population allele frequency databases, and most are predicted to be deleterious by multiple in silico damage-prediction algorithms.ConclusionThese findings indicate that rare de novo variants in LMBRD2 can lead to a previously unrecognised early-onset neurodevelopmental disorder. Further investigation of individuals harbouring LMBRD2 variants may lead to a better understanding of the function of this ubiquitously expressed gene.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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