A framework to identify contributing genes in patients with Phelan-McDermid syndrome.
Anne-Claude TabetThomas RollandMarie DucloyJonathan LévyJulien BurattiAlexandre MathieuDamien HayeLaurence PerrinCéline DupontSandrine PassemardYline CapriAlain VerloesSéverine DrunatBoris KerenCyril MignotIsabelle MareyAurélia JacquetteSandra WhalenEva PipirasBrigitte BenzackenSandra Chantot-BastaraudAlexandra AfenjarDelphine HéronCédric Le CaignecClaire BeneteauOlivier PichonBertrand IsidorAlbert DavidLaila El KhattabiStephan KemenyLaetitia GouasPhilippe VagoAnne-Laure Mosca-BoidronLaurence FaivreChantal MissirianNicole PhilipDamien SanlavillePatrick EderyVéronique SatreCharles CouttonFrançoise DevillardKlaus DieterichMarie-Laure VuillaumeCaroline RooryckDidier LacombeLucile PinsonVincent GatinoisJacques PuechbertyJean ChiesaJames LespinasseChristèle DubourgChloé QuelinMélanie FradinHubert JournelAnnick ToutainDominique MartinAbdelamdjid BenmansourClaire S LeblondRoberto ToroFrédérique AmsellemRichard DelormeThomas BourgeronPublished in: NPJ genomic medicine (2017)
Phelan-McDermid syndrome (PMS) is characterized by a variety of clinical symptoms with heterogeneous degrees of severity, including intellectual disability (ID), absent or delayed speech, and autism spectrum disorders (ASD). It results from a deletion of the distal part of chromosome 22q13 that in most cases includes the SHANK3 gene. SHANK3 is considered a major gene for PMS, but the factors that modulate the severity of the syndrome remain largely unknown. In this study, we investigated 85 patients with different 22q13 rearrangements (78 deletions and 7 duplications). We first explored the clinical features associated with PMS, and provide evidence for frequent corpus callosum abnormalities in 28% of 35 patients with brain imaging data. We then mapped several candidate genomic regions at the 22q13 region associated with high risk of clinical features, and suggest a second locus at 22q13 associated with absence of speech. Finally, in some cases, we identified additional clinically relevant copy-number variants (CNVs) at loci associated with ASD, such as 16p11.2 and 15q11q13, which could modulate the severity of the syndrome. We also report an inherited SHANK3 deletion transmitted to five affected daughters by a mother without ID nor ASD, suggesting that some individuals could compensate for such mutations. In summary, we shed light on the genotype-phenotype relationship of patients with PMS, a step towards the identification of compensatory mechanisms for a better prognosis and possibly treatments of patients with neurodevelopmental disorders.
Keyphrases
- copy number
- autism spectrum disorder
- intellectual disability
- genome wide
- mitochondrial dna
- attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
- dna methylation
- case report
- genome wide identification
- brain injury
- big data
- depressive symptoms
- machine learning
- blood brain barrier
- congenital heart disease
- artificial intelligence
- subarachnoid hemorrhage