Skewed X-chromosome Inactivation in Women with Idiopathic Intellectual Disability is Indicative of Pathogenic Variants
Intellectual disability (ID) is an early onset impairment in cognitive functioning and adaptive behavior, affecting approximately 1% of the population worldwide. Extreme skewing of X-chromosome inactivation (XCI) can be associated with ID phenotypes caused by pathogenic variants in the X chromosome....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Molecular neurobiology 2023-07, Vol.60 (7), p.3758-3769 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Intellectual disability (ID) is an early onset impairment in cognitive functioning and adaptive behavior, affecting approximately 1% of the population worldwide. Extreme skewing of X-chromosome inactivation (XCI) can be associated with ID phenotypes caused by pathogenic variants in the X chromosome. We analyzed the XCI pattern in blood samples of 194 women with idiopathic ID, using the androgen receptor gene (
AR
) methylation assay. Among the 136 patients who were informative, 11 (8%) presented with extreme or total XCI skewing (≥ 90%), which was significantly higher than expected by chance. Whole-exome data obtained from these 11 patients revealed the presence of dominant pathogenic variants in eight of them, all sporadic cases, resulting in a molecular diagnostic rate of 73% (8/11 patients). All variants were mapped to ID-related genes with dominant phenotypes: four variants in the X-linked genes
DDX3X
(an XCI escape gene; two cases),
WDR45,
and
PDHA1
, and four variants in the autosomal genes
KCNB1, CTNNB1, YY1
, and
ANKRD11
. Three of the autosomal genes had no obvious correlation with the observed XCI skewing. However,
YY1
is a known transcriptional repressor that acts in the binding of the
XIST
long noncoding RNA on the inactive X chromosome, providing a mechanistic link between the pathogenic variant and the detected skewed XCI in the carrier. These data confirm that extreme XCI skewing in females with ID is highly indicative of causative X-linked pathogenic variants, and point to the possibility of identifying causative variants in autosomal genes with a XCI role. |
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ISSN: | 0893-7648 1559-1182 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s12035-023-03311-0 |