Global transcriptional disturbances underlie Cornelia de Lange syndrome and related phenotypes
Date
2015Author
GAMBIN, Tomasz
Geckinli, B. Bilge
JHANGIANI, Shalini
MUZNY, Donna M.
YUAN, BO
PATEL, Nisha
CHARNG, Wu-Lin
SUTTON, V. Reid
YEŞİL, GÖZDE
Bozdogan, Sevcan Tug
TOS, Tulay
Koparir, Asuman
BECK, Christine R.
GU, Shen
ASLAN, Huseyin
YUREGIR, Ozge Ozalp
AL RUBEAAN, Ha Lid
ALNAQEB, Dhekra
ALSHAMMARI, Muneera J.
BAYRAM, Yavuz
ATIK, Mehmed M.
Seven, Mehmet
PEHLIVAN, Davut
Tuysuz, Beyhan
Ulucan, Hakan
Ozen, Mustafa
Fenercioglu, Elif
Aydin, Hatip
Koparir, Erkan
KARACA, Ender
GONZAGA-JAUREGUI, Claudia
BOERWINKLE, Eric
ALKURAYA, Fowzan S.
GIBBS, Richard A.
LUPSKI, James R.
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Show full item recordAbstract
Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) is a genetically heterogeneous disorder that presents with extensive phenotypic variability, including facial dysmorphism, developmental delay/intellectual disability (DD/ID), abnormal extremities, and hirsutism. About 65% of patients harbor mutations in genes that encode subunits or regulators of the cohesin complex, including NIPBL, SMC1A, SMC3, RAD21, and HDAC8. Wiedemann-Steiner syndrome (WDSTS), which shares CdLS phenotypic features, is caused by mutations in lysine-specific methyltransferase 2A (KMT2A). Here, we performed whole-exome sequencing (WES) of 2 male siblings clinically diagnosed with WDSTS; this revealed a hemizygous, missense mutation in SMC1A that was predicted to be deleterious. Extensive clinical evaluation and WES of 32 Turkish patients clinically diagnosed with CdLS revealed the presence of a de novo heterozygous nonsense KMT2A mutation in 1 patient without characteristic WDSTS features. We also identified de nova heterozygous mutations in SMC3 or SMC1A that affected RNA splicing in 2 independent patients with combined CdLS and WDSTS features. Furthermore, in families from 2 separate world populations segregating an autosomal-recessive disorder with CdLS-like features, we identified homozygous mutations in TAF6, which encodes a core transcriptional regulatory pathway component. Together, our data, along with recent transcriptome studies, suggest that CdLS and related phenotypes may be "transcriptomopathies" rather than cohesinopathies.
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