Bi-allelic Variants in IQSEC1 Cause Intellectual Disability, Developmental Delay, and Short Stature
Author(s) -
Muhammad Ansar,
Hyunglok Chung,
Ali AlOtaibi,
Mohammad Nael Elagabani,
Thomas A. Ravenscroft,
Sohail Aziz Paracha,
Ralf Scholz,
Tayseer Abdel Magid,
Muhammad Tahir Sarwar,
Sayyed Fahim Shah,
Azhar Ali Qaisar,
Periklis Makrythanasis,
Paul C. Marcogliese,
ErikJan Kamsteeg,
Emilie Falconnet,
Emmanuelle Ranza,
Federico Santoni,
Hesham Aldhalaan,
Ali Alasmari,
Eissa Faqeih,
Jawad Ahmed,
HansChristian Kornau,
Hugo J. Bellen,
Stylianos E. Antonarakis
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.2019.09.013
Subject(s) - biology , genetics , phenotype , loss function , short stature , allele , hypotonia , guanine nucleotide exchange factor , gene , gtpase , endocrinology
We report two consanguineous families with probands that exhibit intellectual disability, developmental delay, short stature, aphasia, and hypotonia in which homozygous non-synonymous variants were identified in IQSEC1 (GenBank: NM_001134382.3). In a Pakistani family, the IQSEC1 segregating variant is c.1028C>T (p.Thr343Met), while in a Saudi Arabian family the variant is c.962G>A (p.Arg321Gln). IQSEC1-3 encode guanine nucleotide exchange factors for the small GTPase ARF6 and their loss affects a variety of actin-dependent cellular processes, including AMPA receptor trafficking at synapses. The ortholog of IQSECs in the fly is schizo and its loss affects growth cone guidance at the midline in the CNS, also an actin-dependent process. Overexpression of the reference IQSEC1 cDNA in wild-type flies is lethal, but overexpression of the two variant IQSEC1 cDNAs did not affect viability. Loss of schizo caused embryonic lethality that could be rescued to 2 nd instar larvae by moderate expression of the human reference cDNA. However, the p.Arg321Gln and p.Thr343Met variants failed to rescue embryonic lethality. These data indicate that the variants behave as loss-of-function mutations. We also show that schizo in photoreceptors is required for phototransduction. Finally, mice with a conditional Iqsec1 deletion in cortical neurons exhibited an increased density of dendritic spines with an immature morphology. The phenotypic similarity of the affecteds and the functional experiments in flies and mice indicate that IQSEC1 variants are the cause of a recessive disease with intellectual disability, developmental delay, and short stature, and that axonal guidance and dendritic projection defects as well as dendritic spine dysgenesis may underlie disease pathogenesis.
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