Expansion and mechanistic insights into de novo DEAF1 variants in DEAF1-associated neurodevelopmental disorders

Author:

McGee Stacey R1,Rajamanickam Shivakumar1,Adhikari Sandeep1,Falayi Oluwatosin C,Wilson Theresa A2,Shayota Brian J234,Cooley Coleman Jessica A5ORCID,Skinner Cindy5,Caylor Raymond C5,Stevenson Roger E5ORCID,Quaio Caio Robledo D' Angioli Costa67ORCID,Wilke Berenice Cunha8,Bain Jennifer M910,Anyane-Yeboa Kwame1112,Brown Kaitlyn13,Greally John M1314,Bijlsma Emilia K15,Ruivenkamp Claudia A L15,Politi Keren16,Arbogast Lydia A1,Collard Michael W1,Huggenvik Jodi I1,Elsea Sarah H2ORCID,Jensik Philip J1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine , Carbondale, IL USA

2. Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine , Houston , USA

3. Department of Pediatrics , Division of Genetics, , Salt Lake City, UT

4. University of Utah , Division of Genetics, , Salt Lake City, UT

5. Greenwood Genetic Center , Greenwood, SC , USA

6. Instituto da Criança (Children’s Hospital), Hospital das Clínicas (HCFMUSP), Faculdade de Medicina (FMUSP), Universidade de São Paulo , São Paulo, SP , Brazil

7. Laboratório Clínico, Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein , São Paulo, SP , Brazil

8. Unicamp , Campinas, SP , Brazil

9. Department of Neurology , Division of Child Neurology, , New York , USA

10. Columbia University Irving Medical Center , Division of Child Neurology, , New York , USA

11. Department of Pediatrics , Division of Clinical Genetics, , New York , USA

12. Columbia University Irving Medical Center , Division of Clinical Genetics, , New York , USA

13. Departments of Pediatrics and Genetics, Albert Einstein College of Medicine , Bronx, NY USA

14. Departments of Genetics, Albert Einstein College of Medicine , Bronx, NY USA

15. Department of Clinical Genetics, Leiden University Medical Centre , PO box 9600, 2300 RC, Leiden , The Netherlands

16. ALYN Hospital , Jerusalem , Israel

Abstract

Abstract De novo deleterious and heritable biallelic mutations in the DNA binding domain (DBD) of the transcription factor deformed epidermal autoregulatory factor 1 (DEAF1) result in a phenotypic spectrum of disorders termed DEAF1-associated neurodevelopmental disorders (DAND). RNA-sequencing using hippocampal RNA from mice with conditional deletion of Deaf1 in the central nervous system indicate that loss of Deaf1 activity results in the altered expression of genes involved in neuronal function, dendritic spine maintenance, development, and activity, with reduced dendritic spines in hippocampal regions. Since DEAF1 is not a dosage-sensitive gene, we assessed the dominant negative activity of previously identified de novo variants and a heritable recessive DEAF1 variant on selected DEAF1-regulated genes in 2 different cell models. While no altered gene expression was observed in cells over-expressing the recessive heritable variant, the gene expression profiles of cells over-expressing de novo variants resulted in similar gene expression changes as observed in CRISPR-Cas9-mediated DEAF1-deleted cells. Altered expression of DEAF1-regulated genes was rescued by exogenous expression of WT-DEAF1 but not by de novo variants in cells lacking endogenous DEAF1. De novo heterozygous variants within the DBD of DEAF1 were identified in 10 individuals with a phenotypic spectrum including autism spectrum disorder, developmental delays, sleep disturbance, high pain tolerance, and mild dysmorphic features. Functional assays demonstrate these variants alter DEAF1 transcriptional activity. Taken together, this study expands the clinical phenotypic spectrum of individuals with DAND, furthers our understanding of potential roles of DEAF1 on neuronal function, and demonstrates dominant negative activity of identified de novo variants.

Funder

Takeda Medical Biochemical Genetics Fellowship Award

Knights of Columbus

Southern Illinois University School of Medicine

National Institutes of Health Grant

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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