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Deleterious, protein-altering variants in the transcriptional coregulator ZMYM3 in 27 individuals with a neurodevelopmental delay phenotype.

Authors :
Hiatt SM
Trajkova S
Sebastiano MR
Partridge EC
Abidi FE
Anderson A
Ansar M
Antonarakis SE
Azadi A
Bachmann-Gagescu R
Bartuli A
Benech C
Berkowitz JL
Betti MJ
Brusco A
Cannon A
Caron G
Chen Y
Cochran ME
Coleman TF
Crenshaw MM
Cuisset L
Curry CJ
Darvish H
Demirdas S
Descartes M
Douglas J
Dyment DA
Elloumi HZ
Ermondi G
Faoucher M
Farrow EG
Felker SA
Fisher H
Hurst ACE
Joset P
Kelly MA
Kmoch S
Leadem BR
Lyons MJ
Macchiaiolo M
Magner M
Mandrile G
Mattioli F
McEown M
Meadows SK
Medne L
Meeks NJL
Montgomery S
Napier MP
Natowicz M
Newberry KM
Niceta M
Noskova L
Nowak CB
Noyes AG
Osmond M
Prijoles EJ
Pugh J
Pullano V
Quélin C
Rahimi-Aliabadi S
Rauch A
Redon S
Reymond A
Schwager CR
Sellars EA
Scheuerle AE
Shukarova-Angelovska E
Skraban C
Stolerman E
Sullivan BR
Tartaglia M
Thiffault I
Uguen K
Umaña LA
van Bever Y
van der Crabben SN
van Slegtenhorst MA
Waisfisz Q
Washington C
Rodan LH
Myers RM
Cooper GM
Source :
American journal of human genetics [Am J Hum Genet] 2023 Feb 02; Vol. 110 (2), pp. 215-227. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Dec 30.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) result from highly penetrant variation in hundreds of different genes, some of which have not yet been identified. Using the MatchMaker Exchange, we assembled a cohort of 27 individuals with rare, protein-altering variation in the transcriptional coregulator ZMYM3, located on the X chromosome. Most (n = 24) individuals were males, 17 of which have a maternally inherited variant; six individuals (4 male, 2 female) harbor de novo variants. Overlapping features included developmental delay, intellectual disability, behavioral abnormalities, and a specific facial gestalt in a subset of males. Variants in almost all individuals (n = 26) are missense, including six that recurrently affect two residues. Four unrelated probands were identified with inherited variation affecting Arg441, a site at which variation has been previously seen in NDD-affected siblings, and two individuals have de novo variation resulting in p.Arg1294Cys (c.3880C>T). All variants affect evolutionarily conserved sites, and most are predicted to damage protein structure or function. ZMYM3 is relatively intolerant to variation in the general population, is widely expressed across human tissues, and encodes a component of the KDM1A-RCOR1 chromatin-modifying complex. ChIP-seq experiments on one variant, p.Arg1274Trp, indicate dramatically reduced genomic occupancy, supporting a hypomorphic effect. While we are unable to perform statistical evaluations to definitively support a causative role for variation in ZMYM3, the totality of the evidence, including 27 affected individuals, recurrent variation at two codons, overlapping phenotypic features, protein-modeling data, evolutionary constraint, and experimentally confirmed functional effects strongly support ZMYM3 as an NDD-associated gene.<br />Competing Interests: Declaration of interests J.L.B., Y.C., B.R.L., M.P.N., A.G.N., and H.Z.E. are employees of GeneDx, LLC. S.E.A. is a cofounder and CEO of MediGenome, the Swiss Institute of Genomic Medicine. All other authors declare no competing interests.<br /> (Copyright © 2022 American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1537-6605
Volume :
110
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of human genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36586412
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2022.12.007