SOBP Is Mutated in Syndromic and Nonsyndromic Intellectual Disability and Is Highly Expressed in the Brain Limbic System
Author(s) -
Efrat Birk,
Adi HarZahav,
M. Chiara Manzini,
Metsada PasmanikChor,
Liora Kornreich,
Christopher A. Walsh,
Konrad NobenTrauth,
Adi Albin,
Amos J. Simon,
Laurence Colleaux,
Yair Morad,
Limor Rainshtein,
David J. Tischfield,
Peter Wang,
Nurit Magal,
Idit Maya,
Noa Shoshani,
Gideon Rechavi,
Doron Gothelf,
G. Maydan,
Mordechai Shohat,
Lina BaselVanagaite
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
the american journal of human genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.661
H-Index - 302
eISSN - 1537-6605
pISSN - 0002-9297
DOI - 10.1016/j.ajhg.2010.10.005
Subject(s) - sobp , neuroscience , biology , population , genetics , psychology , medicine , environmental health , proton therapy , radiation therapy
Intellectual disability (ID) affects 1%-3% of the general population. We recently reported on a family with autosomal-recessive mental retardation with anterior maxillary protrusion and strabismus (MRAMS) syndrome. One of the reported patients with ID did not have dysmorphic features but did have temporal lobe epilepsy and psychosis. We report on the identification of a truncating mutation in the SOBP that is responsible for causing both syndromic and nonsyndromic ID in the same family. The protein encoded by the SOBP, sine oculis binding protein ortholog, is a nuclear zinc finger protein. In mice, Sobp (also known as Jxc1) is critical for patterning of the organ of Corti; one of our patients has a subclinical cochlear hearing loss but no gross cochlear abnormalities. In situ RNA expression studies in postnatal mouse brain showed strong expression in the limbic system at the time interval of active synaptogenesis. The limbic system regulates learning, memory, and affective behavior, but limbic circuitry expression of other genes mutated in ID is unusual. By comparing the protein content of the +/jc to jc/jc mice brains with the use of proteomics, we detected 24 proteins with greater than 1.5-fold differences in expression, including two interacting proteins, dynamin and pacsin1. This study shows mutated SOBP involvement in syndromic and nonsyndromic ID with psychosis in humans.
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