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THOC2 Mutations Implicate mRNA-Export Pathway in X-Linked Intellectual Disability
Author(s) -
Raman Kumar,
Mark Corbett,
Bregje W.M. van Bon,
Joshua A. Woenig,
Lloyd Weir,
Evelyn Douglas,
Kathryn Friend,
Alison Gardner,
Marie Shaw,
Lachlan A. Jolly,
Chuan Tan,
Matthew F. Hunter,
Anna Hackett,
Michael Field,
Elizabeth E. Palmer,
Melanie Leffler,
Carolyn Rogers,
Jackie Boyle,
Melanie Bienek,
Corinna Jensen,
Griet Van Buggenhout,
Hilde Van Esch,
Katrin Hoffmann,
Martine Raynaud,
Huiying Zhao,
Robin Reed,
Hao Hu,
Stefan A. Haas,
Eric Haan,
Vera M. Kalscheuer,
Jozef Gécz
Publication year - 2015
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.2015.05.021
Subject(s) - intellectual disability , genetics , messenger rna , biology , gene
Export of mRNA from the cell nucleus to the cytoplasm is essential for protein synthesis, a process vital to all living eukaryotic cells. mRNA export is highly conserved and ubiquitous. Mutations affecting mRNA and mRNA processing or export factors, which cause aberrant retention of mRNAs in the nucleus, are thus emerging as contributors to an important class of human genetic disorders. Here, we report that variants in THOC2, which encodes a subunit of the highly conserved TREX mRNA-export complex, cause syndromic intellectual disability (ID). Affected individuals presented with variable degrees of ID and commonly observed features included speech delay, elevated BMI, short stature, seizure disorders, gait disturbance, and tremors. X chromosome exome sequencing revealed four missense variants in THOC2 in four families, including family MRX12, first ascertained in 1971. We show that two variants lead to decreased stability of THOC2 and its TREX-complex partners in cells derived from the affected individuals. Protein structural modeling showed that the altered amino acids are located in the RNA-binding domains of two complex THOC2 structures, potentially representing two different intermediate RNA-binding states of THOC2 during RNA transport. Our results show that disturbance of the canonical molecular pathway of mRNA export is compatible with life but results in altered neuronal development with other comorbidities.

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