4.7 Article

SRSF1 haploinsufficiency is responsible for a syndromic developmental disorder associated with intellectual disability

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 110, Issue 5, Pages 790-808

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2023.03.016

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SRSF1 is a non-snRNP that regulates both constitutive and alternative splicing of mRNA. Heterozygous germline SRSF1 variants were identified in individuals with a neuro-developmental disorder, causing developmental delay and intellectual disability. In silico modeling, in vivo splicing assay, and epigenetic analysis confirmed the pathogenicity of most variants and the loss of SRSF1-mediated splicing activity.
SRSF1 (also known as ASF/SF2) is a non-small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (non-snRNP) that belongs to the arginine/serine (R/S) domain family. It recognizes and binds to mRNA, regulating both constitutive and alternative splicing. The complete loss of this proto-oncogene in mice is embryonically lethal. Through international data sharing, we identified 17 individuals (10 females and 7 males) with a neuro-developmental disorder (NDD) with heterozygous germline SRSF1 variants, mostly de novo, including three frameshift variants, three nonsense variants, seven missense variants, and two microdeletions within region 17q22 encompassing SRSF1. Only in one family, the de novo origin could not be established. All individuals featured a recurrent phenotype including developmental delay and intellec-tual disability (DD/ID), hypotonia, neurobehavioral problems, with variable skeletal (66.7%) and cardiac (46%) anomalies. To investi-gate the functional consequences of SRSF1 variants, we performed in silico structural modeling, developed an in vivo splicing assay in Drosophila, and carried out episignature analysis in blood-derived DNA from affected individuals. We found that all loss-of-function and 5 out of 7 missense variants were pathogenic, leading to a loss of SRSF1 splicing activity in Drosophila, correlating with a detectable and specific DNA methylation episignature. In addition, our orthogonal in silico, in vivo, and epigenetics analyses enabled the separation of clearly pathogenic missense variants from those with uncertain significance. Overall, these results indicated that haploinsufficiency of SRSF1 is responsible for a syndromic NDD with ID due to a partial loss of SRSF1-mediated splicing activity.

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