Identification of a Rare Novel KMT2C Mutation That Presents with Schizophrenia in a Multiplex Family.
Chia-Hsiang ChenAiling HuangYu-Shu HuangTing-Hsuan FangPublished in: Journal of personalized medicine (2021)
Schizophrenia is a complex genetic disorder involving many common variants with modest effects and rare mutations with high penetrance. Rare mutations associated with schizophrenia are highly heterogeneous and private for affected individuals and families. Identifying such mutations can help establish the molecular diagnosis, elucidate the pathogenesis, and provide helpful genetic counseling for affected patients and families. We performed a whole-exome sequencing analysis to search for rare pathogenic mutations co-segregating with schizophrenia transmitted in a dominant inheritance in a two-generation multiplex family. We identified a rare missense mutation H1574R (Histidine1574Arginine, rs199796552) of KMT2C (lysine methyltransferase 2C) co-segregating with affected members in this family. The mutation is a novel deleterious mutation of KMT2C, not reported before in the literature. The KMT2C encodes a histone 3 lysine 4 (H3K4)-specific methyltransferase and involves epigenetic regulation of brain gene expression. Mutations of KMT2C have been found in neurodevelopmental disorders, such as Kleefstra syndrome, intellectual disability, and autism spectrum disorders. Our finding suggests that schizophrenia might be one of the clinical phenotype spectra of KMT2C mutations, and KMT2C might be a novel risk gene for schizophrenia. Nevertheless, the co-segregation of this mutation with schizophrenia in this family might also be due to chance; functional assays of this mutation are needed to address this issue.
Keyphrases
- bipolar disorder
- intellectual disability
- gene expression
- autism spectrum disorder
- dna methylation
- copy number
- systematic review
- high throughput
- genome wide
- mitochondrial dna
- ejection fraction
- hepatitis c virus
- blood brain barrier
- prognostic factors
- smoking cessation
- white matter
- amino acid
- health insurance
- working memory
- patient reported outcomes
- attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
- human immunodeficiency virus
- cerebral ischemia
- single cell