Inspired by a patient
Barone R, Fichera M, De Grandi M, Battaglia M, Lo Faro V,
Mattina T, Rizzo R. Familial 18q12.2 deletion supports the role of RNA-binding
protein CELF4 in autism spectrum disorders. Am J Med Genet A. 2017
Jun;173(6):1649-1655.
Abstract
Deletion of 18q12.2 is an increasingly recognized condition
with a distinct neuropsychiatric phenotype. Twenty-two patients have been
described with overlapping neurobehavioral disturbances including developmental
delay, intellectual disability of variable degree, seizures, motor coordination
disorder, behavioral/emotional disturbances, and autism spectrum disorders. The
CUGBP Elav-like family member 4 (CELF4) gene at 18q12.2 encodes a RNA-binding
protein that links to RNA subsets involved in pre- and postsynaptic neurotransmission
including almost 30% of potential autism-related genes. Haploinsufficiency of
CELF4 was associated with an autism or autistic behavior diagnosis in two adult
patients with de novo 18q12.2 deletions. We report on a girl and her mildly affected
mother with a 275 kb deletion at 18q12.2 involving CELF4 and KIAA1328 whose
disruption is not associated with any known disease. The child was diagnosed
with syndromic intellectual disability and autism at 6 years of age. Her mother
had minor dysmorphisms, mild intellectual disability, and autistic behavior.
The deleted region reported in this family is one of the smallest so far
reported at 18q12.2. This is also the first full clinical description of
maternally inherited CELF4 haploinsufficiency. The present study refines the
molecular and neuropsychiatric phenotype associated with 18q12.2 deletion
leading to CELF4 haploinsufficiency and provides evidence for a role for CELF4
in brain development and autism spectrum disorders.
Halgren C, Bache I, Bak M, Myatt MW, Anderson CM,
Brøndum-Nielsen K, Tommerup N. Haploinsufficiency of CELF4 at 18q12.2 is associated with
developmental and behavioral disorders, seizures, eye manifestations, and
obesity. Eur J Hum Genet.2012 Dec;20(12):1315-9
.
Abstract
Only 20 patients with deletions of 18q12.2 have been
reported in the literature and the associated phenotype includes borderline
intellectual disability, behavioral problems, seizures, obesity, and eye
manifestations. Here, we report a male patient with a de novo translocation
involving chromosomes 12 and 18, with borderline IQ, developmental and
behavioral disorders, myopia, obesity, and febrile seizures in childhood. We
characterized the rearrangement with Affymetrix SNP 6.0 Array analysis and next-generation
mate pair sequencing and found truncation of CELF4 at 18q12.2. This second
report of a patient with a neurodevelopmental phenotype and a translocation
involving CELF4 supports that CELF4 is responsible for the phenotype associated
with deletion of 18q12.2. Our study illustrates the utility of high-resolution
genome-wide techniques in identifying neurodevelopmental and neurobehavioral
genes, and it adds to the growing evidence, including a transgenic mouse model,
that CELF4 is important for human brain development.
No comments:
Post a Comment