4.8 Article

MAP1B mutations cause intellectual disability and extensive white matter deficit

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-05595-6

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Funding

  1. Swedish Society of Medicine
  2. Swedish Brain Foundation
  3. Swedish Society for Medical Research
  4. NEWMEDS [115008]
  5. EUAIMS [115300]
  6. European Union
  7. EU-FP7 [602450]
  8. EU [286213]

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Discovery of coding variants in genes that confer risk of neurodevelopmental disorders is an important step towards understanding the pathophysiology of these disorders. Wholegenome sequencing of 31,463 Icelanders uncovers a frameshift variant (E712KfsTer10) in microtubule-associated protein 1B (MAP1B) that associates with ID/low IQ in a large pedigree (genome-wide corrected P = 0.022). Additional stop-gain variants in MAP1B (E1032Ter and R1664Ter) validate the association with ID and IQ. Carriers have 24% less white matter (WM) volume (beta = -2.1SD, P = 5.1 x 10(-8)), 47% less corpus callosum (CC) volume (beta = -2.4SD, P = 5.5 x 10(-10)) and lower brain-wide fractional anisotropy (P = 6.7 x 10(-4)). In summary, we show that loss of MAP1B function affects general cognitive ability through a profound, brain-wide WM deficit with likely disordered or compromised axons.

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