4.7 Article

TAF1 Variants Are Associated with Dysmorphic Features, Intellectual Disability, and Neurological Manifestations

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 97, Issue 6, Pages 922-932

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2015.11.005

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Stanley Institute for Cognitive Genomics at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
  2. NIH [HG006465]
  3. Alberta Children's Hospital Foundation
  4. Instituto de Salud Carlos III Accion Estrategica en Salud [PI14/00350]
  5. Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development, ZonMw [907-00-365]
  6. Cincinnati Children's Hospital

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We describe an X-linked genetic syndrome associated with mutations in TAF1 and manifesting with global developmental delay, intellectual disability (ID), characteristic facial dysmorphology, generalized hypotonia, and variable neurologic features, all in male individuals. Simultaneous studies using diverse strategies led to the identification of nine families with overlapping clinical presentations and affected by de novo or maternally inherited single-nucleotide changes. Two additional families harboring large duplications involving TAF1 were also found to share phenotypic overlap with the probands harboring single-nucleotide changes, but they also demonstrated a severe neurodegeneration phenotype. Functional analysis with RNA-seq for one of the families suggested that the phenotype is associated with downregulation of a set of genes notably enriched with genes regulated by E-box proteins. In addition, knockdown and mutant studies of this gene in zebrafish have shown a quantifiable, albeit small, effect on a neuronal phenotype. Our results suggest that mutations in TAF1 play a critical role in the development of this X-linked ID syndrome.

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