4.5 Article

Biallelic variants in ZNF142 lead to a syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder

Journal

CLINICAL GENETICS
Volume 102, Issue 2, Pages 98-109

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cge.14165

Keywords

epilepsy; intellectual disability; language impairement; movement disorder; neurodevelopmental disorder; ZNF142

Funding

  1. BMBF (Treat-ION) [01GM1907A]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [418081722, 433158657]
  3. DFG [FOR-2715, Le1030/16-2, Le1030/23-1]
  4. Edmond J. Safra Foundation
  5. EU Horizon 2020
  6. Italian Ministry of Health [CCR-2017-23669081, RCR-2020-23670068_001, RCR-2019-23669117_001, RF-2018-12366931]
  7. Medical Research Council [MR/S01165X/1, MR/S005021/1, G0601943]
  8. Michael J. Fox Foundation
  9. UCLH Biomedical Research Centre
  10. Rosetrees Trust
  11. SOLVE-RD
  12. Spanish government grants (MCIU/ AEI/FEDER, UE) [RTC-2017-6494, RTI2018-094434-B-I00]
  13. ISCIII [DTS20-00024]
  14. European JPIAMR network EPIC-Alliance
  15. Wellcome Trust [WT093205MA, WT104033AIA, 165908]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Biallelic variants of the ZNF142 gene have been associated with intellectual disability, speech impairment, seizures, and movement disorders. This study expands on previous research by providing phenotype and genotype information of 26 individuals from 16 families. The clinical features of the individuals suggest a syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder with mild to moderate intellectual disability, language and gross motor development delays, seizures, hypotonia, behavioral features, movement disorders, and facial dysmorphism.
Biallelic variants of the gene encoding for the zinc-finger protein 142 (ZNF142) have recently been associated with intellectual disability (ID), speech impairment, seizures, and movement disorders in nine individuals from five families. In this study, we obtained phenotype and genotype information of 26 further individuals from 16 families. Among the 27 different ZNF142 variants identified in the total of 35 individuals only four were missense. Missense variants may give a milder phenotype by changing the local structure of ZF motifs as suggested by protein modeling; but this correlation should be validated in larger cohorts and pathogenicity of the missense variants should be investigated with functional studies. Clinical features of the 35 individuals suggest that biallelic ZNF142 variants lead to a syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder with mild to moderate ID, varying degrees of delay in language and gross motor development, early onset seizures, hypotonia, behavioral features, movement disorders, and facial dysmorphism. The differences in symptom frequencies observed in the unpublished individuals compared to those of published, and recognition of previously underemphasized facial features are likely to be due to the small sizes of the previous cohorts, which underlines the importance of larger cohorts for the phenotype descriptions of rare genetic disorders.

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