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Mutations in ARMC9, which Encodes a Basal Body Protein, Cause Joubert Syndrome in Humans and Ciliopathy Phenotypes in Zebrafish
Author(s) -
Julie C. Van De Weghe,
Tamara D. S. Rusterholz,
Brooke Latour,
Megan E. Grout,
Kimberly A. Aldinger,
Ranad Shaheen,
Jennifer C. Dempsey,
Sateesh Maddirevula,
Yong-Han Hank Cheng,
Ian G. Phelps,
Matthias Gesemann,
Himanshu Goel,
Ohad S. Birk,
Talal Alanzi,
Rifaat Rawashdeh,
Arif O. Khan,
Michael J. Bamshad,
Deborah A. Nickerson,
Stephan C. F. Neuhauss,
William B. Dobyns,
Fowzan S. Alkuraya,
Ronald Roepman,
Ruxandra BachmannGagescu,
Dan Doherty
Publication year - 2017
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.2017.05.010
Subject(s) - ciliopathy , joubert syndrome , ciliopathies , cilium , biology , ciliogenesis , polydactyly , coloboma , zebrafish , genetics , agenesis of the corpus callosum , nephronophthisis , lissencephaly , neuroscience , phenotype , corpus callosum , gene
Joubert syndrome (JS) is a recessive neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by hypotonia, ataxia, abnormal eye movements, and variable cognitive impairment. It is defined by a distinctive brain malformation known as the "molar tooth sign" on axial MRI. Subsets of affected individuals have malformations such as coloboma, polydactyly, and encephalocele, as well as progressive retinal dystrophy, fibrocystic kidney disease, and liver fibrosis. More than 35 genes have been associated with JS, but in a subset of families the genetic cause remains unknown. All of the gene products localize in and around the primary cilium, making JS a canonical ciliopathy. Ciliopathies are unified by their overlapping clinical features and underlying mechanisms involving ciliary dysfunction. In this work, we identify biallelic rare, predicted-deleterious ARMC9 variants (stop-gain, missense, splice-site, and single-exon deletion) in 11 individuals with JS from 8 families, accounting for approximately 1% of the disorder. The associated phenotypes range from isolated neurological involvement to JS with retinal dystrophy, additional brain abnormalities (e.g., heterotopia, Dandy-Walker malformation), pituitary insufficiency, and/or synpolydactyly. We show that ARMC9 localizes to the basal body of the cilium and is upregulated during ciliogenesis. Typical ciliopathy phenotypes (curved body shape, retinal dystrophy, coloboma, and decreased cilia) in a CRISPR/Cas9-engineered zebrafish mutant model provide additional support for ARMC9 as a ciliopathy-associated gene. Identifying ARMC9 mutations as a cause of JS takes us one step closer to a full genetic understanding of this important disorder and enables future functional work to define the central biological mechanisms underlying JS and other ciliopathies.

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