Genetic basis of neurodevelopmental disorders in 103 Jordanian families

We recruited 103 families from Jordan with neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD) and patterns of inheritance mostly suggestive of autosomal recessive inheritance. In each family, we investigated at least one affected individual using exome sequencing and an in‐house diagnostic variant interpretation pi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical genetics 2020-04, Vol.97 (4), p.621-627
Hauptverfasser: Froukh, Tawfiq, Nafie, Omar, Al Hait, Sana' A. S., Laugwitz, Lucia, Sommerfeld, Julia, Sturm, Marc, Baraghiti, Aya, Issa, Tala, Al‐Nazer, Anis, Koch, Philipp A., Hanselmann, Johannes, Kootz, Beate, Bauer, Peter, Al‐Ameri, Wael, Abou Jamra, Rami, Alfrook, Ayman J., Hamadallah, Moath, Sofan, Linda, Riess, Angelika, Haack, Tobias B., Riess, Olaf, Buchert, Rebecca
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We recruited 103 families from Jordan with neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD) and patterns of inheritance mostly suggestive of autosomal recessive inheritance. In each family, we investigated at least one affected individual using exome sequencing and an in‐house diagnostic variant interpretation pipeline including a search for copy number variation. This approach led us to identify the likely molecular defect in established disease genes in 37 families. We could identify 25 pathogenic nonsense and 11 missense variants as well as 3 pathogenic copy number variants and 1 repeat expansion. Notably, 11 of the disease‐causal variants occurred de novo. In addition, we prioritized a homozygous frameshift variant in PUS3 in two sisters with intellectual disability. To our knowledge, PUS3 has been postulated only recently as a candidate disease gene for intellectual disability in a single family with three affected siblings. Our findings provide additional evidence to establish loss of PUS3 function as a cause of intellectual disability.
ISSN:0009-9163
1399-0004
DOI:10.1111/cge.13720