Phenotypic and protein localization heterogeneity associated with <i>AHDC1</i> pathogenic protein‐truncating alleles in Xia–Gibbs syndrome

Michael M. Khayat(Baylor College of Medicine), He Li(Baylor College of Medicine), Varuna Chander(Baylor College of Medicine), Jianhong Hu(Baylor College of Medicine), Adam Hansen(Baylor College of Medicine), Shoudong Li(Baylor College of Medicine), Josh Traynelis(Baylor College of Medicine), Hua Shen(Baylor College of Medicine), George Weissenberger(Baylor College of Medicine), Fabio Stossi(Baylor College of Medicine), Hannah L. Johnson(Baylor College of Medicine), James R. Lupski(Baylor College of Medicine), Jennifer E. Posey(Baylor College of Medicine), Aniko Sabo(Baylor College of Medicine), Qingchang Meng(Baylor College of Medicine), David R. Murdock(Baylor College of Medicine), Michael F. Wangler(Baylor College of Medicine), Richard A. Gibbs(Baylor College of Medicine)
Human Mutation
March 1, 2021
Cited by 23Open Access
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Abstract

Xia-Gibbs syndrome (XGS) is a rare Mendelian disease typically caused by de novo stop-gain or frameshift mutations in the AT-hook DNA binding motif containing 1 (AHDC1) gene. Patients usually present in early infancy with hypotonia and developmental delay and later exhibit intellectual disability (ID). The overall presentation is variable, however, and the emerging clinical picture is still evolving. A detailed phenotypic analysis of 34 XGS individuals revealed five core phenotypes (delayed motor milestones, speech delay, low muscle tone, ID, and hypotonia) in more than 80% of individuals and an additional 12 features that occurred more variably. Seizures and scoliosis were more frequently associated with truncations that arise before the midpoint of the protein although the occurrence of most features could not be predicted by the mutation position. Transient expression of wild type and different patient truncated AHDC1 protein forms in human cell lines revealed abnormal patterns of nuclear localization including a diffuse distribution of a short truncated form and nucleolar aggregation in mid-protein truncated forms. Overall, both the occurrence of variable phenotypes and the different distribution of the expressed protein reflect the heterogeneity of this syndrome.


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