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Mutations in the Alpha 1,2-Mannosidase Gene, MAN1B1, Cause Autosomal-Recessive Intellectual Disability
Author(s) -
Muhammad Rafiq,
Andreas W. Kuß,
Lucia Puettmann,
Abdul Noor,
Annapoorani Ramiah,
Ghazanfar Ali,
Hao Hu,
Nadir Ali Kerio,
Yong Xiang,
Masoud Garshasbi,
Muzammil Ahmad Khan,
Gisele E. Ishak,
Rosanna Weksberg,
Reinhard Ullmann,
Andreas Tzschach,
Kimia Kahrizi,
Khalid Mahmood,
Farooq Naeem,
Muhammad Ayub,
Kelley W. Moremen,
John B. Vincent,
Hans Hilger Ropers,
Muhammad Ansar,
Hossein Najmabadi
Publication year - 2011
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.2011.06.006
Subject(s) - genetics , missense mutation , locus (genetics) , biology , refseq , sanger sequencing , gene , genotyping , nonsense mutation , disease gene identification , genome , mutation , genotype , exome sequencing
We have used genome-wide genotyping to identify an overlapping homozygosity-by-descent locus on chromosome 9q34.3 (MRT15) in four consanguineous families affected by nonsyndromic autosomal-recessive intellectual disability (NS-ARID) and one in which the patients show additional clinical features. Four of the families are from Pakistan, and one is from Iran. Using a combination of next-generation sequencing and Sanger sequencing, we have identified mutations in the gene MAN1B1, encoding a mannosyl oligosaccharide, alpha 1,2-mannosidase. In one Pakistani family, MR43, a homozygous nonsense mutation (RefSeq number NM_016219.3: c.1418G>A [p.Trp473*]), segregated with intellectual disability and additional dysmorphic features. We also identified the missense mutation c. 1189G>A (p.Glu397Lys; RefSeq number NM_016219.3), which segregates with NS-ARID in three families who come from the same village and probably have shared inheritance. In the Iranian family, the missense mutation c.1000C>T (p.Arg334Cys; RefSeq number NM_016219.3) also segregates with NS-ARID. Both missense mutations are at amino acid residues that are conserved across the animal kingdom, and they either reduce k(cat) by ∼1300-fold or disrupt stable protein expression in mammalian cells. MAN1B1 is one of the few NS-ARID genes with an elevated mutation frequency in patients with NS-ARID from different populations.

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