ZMIZ1 Variants Cause a Syndromic Neurodevelopmental Disorder
Author(s) -
Raphaël Carapito,
Ekaterina L. Ivanova,
Aurore Morlon,
Linyan Meng,
Anne Molitor,
Éva Erdmann,
Bruno Kieffer,
Angélique Pichot,
Lydie Naegely,
Aline Kolmer,
Nicodème Paul,
Antoine Hanauer,
Frédéric Tran MauThem,
Nolwenn JeanMarçais,
Susan M. Hiatt,
Gregory M. Cooper,
Tatiana Tvrdik,
Alison M. Muir,
Clémantine Dimartino,
Maya Chopra,
Jeanne Amiel,
Christopher T. Gordon,
Fabien Dutreux,
Aurore Garde,
Christel ThauvinRobinet,
Xia Wang,
Magalie S. Leduc,
Meredith Phillips,
Heather P. Crawford,
Mary K. Kukolich,
David Hunt,
Victoria Harrison,
Mira Kharbanda,
Robert Śmigiel,
Nina B. Gold,
Christina Hung,
David Viskochil,
Sarah Dugan,
Pınar BayrakToydemir,
Géraldine JolyHélas,
AnneMarie Guerrot,
Caroline SchluthBolard,
Marlène Rio,
Ingrid M. Wentzensen,
Kirsty McWalter,
Rhonda E. Schnur,
Andrea M. Lewis,
Seema R. Lalani,
Noël Mensah-Bonsu,
Jocelyn Céraline,
Zijie Sun,
Rafał Płoski,
Carlos A. Bacino,
Heather C. Mefford,
Laurence Faivre,
Olaf A. Bodamer,
Jamel Chelly,
Bertrand Isidor,
Seiamak Bahram
Publication year - 2019
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.2018.12.007
Subject(s) - neurodevelopmental disorder , genetics , medicine , biology , bioinformatics , computational biology , gene
ZMIZ1 is a coactivator of several transcription factors, including p53, the androgen receptor, and NOTCH1. Here, we report 19 subjects with intellectual disability and developmental delay carrying variants in ZMIZ1. The associated features include growth failure, feeding difficulties, microcephaly, facial dysmorphism, and various other congenital malformations. Of these 19, 14 unrelated subjects carried de novo heterozygous single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) or single-base insertions/deletions, 3 siblings harbored a heterozygous single-base insertion, and 2 subjects had a balanced translocation disrupting ZMIZ1 or involving a regulatory region of ZMIZ1. In total, we identified 13 point mutations that affect key protein regions, including a SUMO acceptor site, a central disordered alanine-rich motif, a proline-rich domain, and a transactivation domain. All identified variants were absent from all available exome and genome databases. In vitro, ZMIZ1 showed impaired coactivation of the androgen receptor. In vivo, overexpression of ZMIZ1 mutant alleles in developing mouse brains using in utero electroporation resulted in abnormal pyramidal neuron morphology, polarization, and positioning, underscoring the importance of ZMIZ1 in neural development and supporting mutations in ZMIZ1 as the cause of a rare neurodevelopmental syndrome.
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