1. Pathogenic variants in TNRC6B cause a genetic disorder characterised by developmental delay/intellectual disability and a spectrum of neurobehavioural phenotypes including autism and ADHD.
- Author
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Granadillo JL, P A Stegmann A, Guo H, Xia K, Angle B, Bontempo K, Ranells JD, Newkirk P, Costin C, Viront J, Stumpel CT, Sinnema M, Panis B, Pfundt R, Krapels IPC, Klaassens M, Nicolai J, Li J, Jiang Y, Marco E, Canton A, Latronico AC, Montenegro L, Leheup B, Bonnet C, M Amudhavalli S, Lawson CE, McWalter K, Telegrafi A, Pearson R, Kvarnung M, Wang X, Bi W, Rosenfeld JA, and Shinawi M
- Subjects
- Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity complications, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity pathology, Autistic Disorder complications, Autistic Disorder pathology, Child, Child, Preschool, Developmental Disabilities genetics, Developmental Disabilities pathology, Female, Heterozygote, Humans, Intellectual Disability complications, Intellectual Disability genetics, Intellectual Disability pathology, Language Development Disorders genetics, Language Development Disorders pathology, Male, Motor Skills Disorders genetics, Motor Skills Disorders pathology, Mutation genetics, Phenotype, Exome Sequencing, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity genetics, Autistic Disorder genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, RNA-Binding Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Background: Rare variants in hundreds of genes have been implicated in developmental delay (DD), intellectual disability (ID) and neurobehavioural phenotypes. TNRC6B encodes a protein important for RNA silencing. Heterozygous truncating variants have been reported in three patients from large cohorts with autism, but no full phenotypic characterisation was described., Methods: Clinical and molecular characterisation was performed on 17 patients with TNRC6B variants. Clinical data were obtained by retrospective chart review, parent interviews, direct patient interaction with providers and formal neuropsychological evaluation., Results: Clinical findings included DD/ID (17/17) (speech delay in 94% (16/17), fine motor delay in 82% (14/17) and gross motor delay in 71% (12/17) of subjects), autism or autistic traits (13/17), attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) (11/17), other behavioural problems (7/17) and musculoskeletal findings (12/17). Other congenital malformations or clinical findings were occasionally documented. The majority of patients exhibited some dysmorphic features but no recognisable gestalt was identified. 17 heterozygous TNRC6B variants were identified in 12 male and five female unrelated subjects by exome sequencing (14), a targeted panel (2) and a chromosomal microarray (1). The variants were nonsense (7), frameshift (5), splice site (2), intragenic deletions (2) and missense (1)., Conclusions: Variants in TNRC6B cause a novel genetic disorder characterised by recurrent neurocognitive and behavioural phenotypes featuring DD/ID, autism, ADHD and other behavioural abnormalities. Our data highly suggest that haploinsufficiency is the most likely pathogenic mechanism. TNRC6B should be added to the growing list of genes of the RNA-induced silencing complex associated with ID/DD, autism and ADHD., Competing Interests: Competing interests: KM, AT and RP are employed by GeneDx, and XW, WB, JAR receive salary support from Baylor Genetics Laboratory. Both laboratories offer extensive genetic laboratory testing, including exome sequencing and derive revenue from this activity., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2020
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