4.6 Article

A biallelic SNIP1 Amish founder variant causes a recognizable neurodevelopmental disorder

Journal

PLOS GENETICS
Volume 17, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1009803

Keywords

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Funding

  1. MRC [G1001931, G1002279]
  2. MRC Proximity to Discover and Confidence in Concept grants [MC-PC-18047, MC_PC_15054, MC_PC_15047]
  3. Newlife Foundation for disabled children
  4. BBSRC/EPSRC Interface Innovation Fellowship [EP/S001352/1]

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The study identifies a SNIP1 gene variant associated with neurodevelopmental disorders in a population with high prevalence, highlighting key clinical features including hypotonia and intellectual disability. Transcript studies reveal altered gene expression profiles potentially explaining clinical outcomes, providing important insights into the molecular roles of SNIP1 and potential therapeutic avenues for research.
SNIP1 (Smad nuclear interacting protein 1) is a widely expressed transcriptional suppressor of the TGF-beta signal-transduction pathway which plays a key role in human spliceosome function. Here, we describe extensive genetic studies and clinical findings of a complex inherited neurodevelopmental disorder in 35 individuals associated with a SNIP1 NM_024700.4:c.1097A>G, p.(Glu366Gly) variant, present at high frequency in the Amish community. The cardinal clinical features of the condition include hypotonia, global developmental delay, intellectual disability, seizures, and a characteristic craniofacial appearance. Our gene transcript studies in affected individuals define altered gene expression profiles of a number of molecules with well-defined neurodevelopmental and neuropathological roles, potentially explaining clinical outcomes. Together these data confirm this SNIP1 gene variant as a cause of an autosomal recessive complex neurodevelopmental disorder and provide important insight into the molecular roles of SNIP1, which likely explain the cardinal clinical outcomes in affected individuals, defining potential therapeutic avenues for future research.

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