Back to Search Start Over

Haploinsufficiency of the Notch Ligand DLL1 Causes Variable Neurodevelopmental Disorders

Authors :
Perrine Charles
Kathleen Brown
Isabelle Thiffault
Emily Alderman
Uwe Kornak
Shuxi Liu
Xin Wang
Carol J Saunders
Carrie Costin
Erin Torti
Muhammad Zafar
Elysa J. Marco
S. Fehr
Kimberly Foss
Lara Segebrecht
Aida Telegrafi
Denise Horn
Thoa K. Ha
Maxime Cadieux-Dion
Sylvia Stockler-Ipsiroglu
Keely M Fitzgerald
Emily Fleming
Nadja Ehmke
Anne Chun-Hui Tsai
Yue Si
Tracy Cartwright
Ghayda M. Mirzaa
Kirsty McWalter
Boris Keren
Eric T. Rush
Yanmin Chen
Gabriele Hildebrand
Max Schubach
Anne Slavotinek
Cornelius F. Boerkoel
Simone Race
Marie T. McDonald
Björn Fischer-Zirnsak
Source :
The American Journal of Human Genetics. 105:631-639
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Notch signaling is an established developmental pathway for brain morphogenesis. Given that Delta-like 1 (DLL1) is a ligand for the Notch receptor and that a few individuals with developmental delay, intellectual disability, and brain malformations have microdeletions encompassing DLL1, we hypothesized that insufficiency of DLL1 causes a human neurodevelopmental disorder. We performed exome sequencing in individuals with neurodevelopmental disorders. The cohort was identified using known Matchmaker Exchange nodes such as GeneMatcher. This method identified 15 individuals from 12 unrelated families with heterozygous pathogenic DLL1 variants (nonsense, missense, splice site, and one whole gene deletion). The most common features in our cohort were intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder, seizures, variable brain malformations, muscular hypotonia, and scoliosis. We did not identify an obvious genotype-phenotype correlation. Analysis of one splice site variant showed an in-frame insertion of 12 bp. In conclusion, heterozygous DLL1 pathogenic variants cause a variable neurodevelopmental phenotype and multi-systemic features. The clinical and molecular data support haploinsufficiency as a mechanism for the pathogenesis of this DLL1-related disorder and affirm the importance of DLL1 in human brain development.

Details

ISSN :
00029297
Volume :
105
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American Journal of Human Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6c8b030befe4d857e2885b2463724650