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Mutations in FAM50A suggest that Armfield XLID syndrome is a spliceosomopathy

Authors :
Charles E. Schwartz
Emil Alexov
Jyoti S. Choudhary
Sujata Srikanth
Joy Norris
Keri Ramsey
Lu Yu
David J. Adams
Yu-Ri Lee
Karen W. Gripp
Ed Spence
Cheol-Hee Kim
Aida Telegrafi
Roger E. Stevenson
Chelsea Roadhouse
Trevor Moreland
Tae Ik Choi
Soo Jeong Kwon
Hee Moon Park
Erica E. Davis
Ingrid M. Wentzensen
Won Do Heo
Kim Armfield-Uhas
Cindy Skinner
Nicholas Katsanis
Yunhui Peng
Kamal Khan
Mercedes Pardo
Kirsty McWalter
Shahid Mahmood Baig
Marie R. Mooney
Nicola A. Thompson
Michael J. Lyons
Chumei Li
Daseuli Yu
Kirk Aleck
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-17 (2020), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2020.

Abstract

Intellectual disability (ID) is a heterogeneous clinical entity and includes an excess of males who harbor variants on the X-chromosome (XLID). We report rare FAM50A missense variants in the original Armfield XLID syndrome family localized in Xq28 and four additional unrelated males with overlapping features. Our fam50a knockout (KO) zebrafish model exhibits abnormal neurogenesis and craniofacial patterning, and in vivo complementation assays indicate that the patient-derived variants are hypomorphic. RNA sequencing analysis from fam50a KO zebrafish show dysregulation of the transcriptome, with augmented spliceosome mRNAs and depletion of transcripts involved in neurodevelopment. Zebrafish RNA-seq datasets show a preponderance of 3′ alternative splicing events in fam50a KO, suggesting a role in the spliceosome C complex. These data are supported with transcriptomic signatures from cell lines derived from affected individuals and FAM50A protein-protein interaction data. In sum, Armfield XLID syndrome is a spliceosomopathy associated with aberrant mRNA processing during development.<br />Armfield X-linked disability (XLID) disorder has previously been linked to a locus in Xq28. Here, the authors report rare missense variants in FAM50A at Xq28, show that FAM50A interacts with the spliceosome, and that mis-splicing is enriched in knockout zebrafish suggesting it is a spliceosomopathy.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....80297b0ddd856c866eac969b196320b3