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De novo heterozygous missense and loss-of-function variants in CDC42BPB are associated with a neurodevelopmental phenotype.

Ilana ChiltonVolkan OkurGiuseppina VitielloAngelo SelicorniMilena MarianiAlice GoldenbergThomas HussonDominique CampionKlaske D LichtenbeltKoen van GassenMichelle SteinrathsJennifer RiceElizabeth R RoederRebecca O LittlejohnMyriam SrourGuillaume SebireAndrea AccogliDelphine HéronSolveig HeideCaroline NavaChristel DepienneAustin LarsonDmitriy NiyazovMeron AzageGeorge HogansonJennifer BurtonEric T RushJanda L JenkinsCarol J SaundersIsabelle ThiffaultJoseph T AlaimoJulie FleischerDaniel GroepperKaren W GrippWendy K Chung
Published in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2020)
CDC42BPB encodes MRCKβ (myotonic dystrophy-related Cdc42-binding kinase beta), a serine/threonine protein kinase, and a downstream effector of CDC42, which has recently been associated with Takenouchi-Kosaki syndrome, an autosomal dominant neurodevelopmental disorder. We identified 12 heterozygous predicted deleterious variants in CDC42BPB (9 missense, 2 frameshift, and 1 nonsense) in 14 unrelated individuals (confirmed de novo in 11/14) with neurodevelopmental disorders including developmental delay/intellectual disability, autism, hypotonia, and structural brain abnormalities including cerebellar vermis hypoplasia and agenesis/hypoplasia of the corpus callosum. The frameshift and nonsense variants in CDC42BPB are expected to be gene-disrupting and lead to haploinsufficiency via nonsense-mediated decay. All missense variants are located in highly conserved and functionally important protein domains/regions: 3 are found in the protein kinase domain, 2 are in the citron homology domain, and 4 in a 20-amino acid sequence between 2 coiled-coil regions, 2 of which are recurrent. Future studies will help to delineate the natural history and to elucidate the underlying biological mechanisms of the missense variants leading to the neurodevelopmental and behavioral phenotypes.
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