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A novel KNL1 intronic splicing variant likely destabilizes the KMN complex, causing primary microcephaly.

Bridget J FellowsGiovanna Cantini TolezanoSara Ferreira PiresMischa S G RueggKaren M KnappAna Cristina Victorino KrepischiLouise S Bicknell
Published in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2023)
Primary microcephaly (MCPH) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by head circumference of at least two standard deviations below the mean. Biallelic variants in the kinetochore gene KNL1 is a known cause of MCPH4. KNL1 is the central component of the KNL1-MIS12-NSL1 (KMN) network, which acts as the signaling hub of the kinetochore and is required for correct chromosomal segregation during mitosis. We identified biallelic KNL1 variants in two siblings from a non-consanguineous family with microcephaly and intellectual disability. The two siblings carry a frameshift variant predicted to prematurely truncate the transcript and undergo nonsense mediated decay, and an intronic single nucleotide variant (SNV) predicted to disrupt splicing. An in vitro splicing assay and qPCR from blood-derived RNA confirmed that the intronic variant skips exon 23, significantly reducing levels of the canonical transcript. Protein modeling confirmed that absence of exon 23, an inframe exon, would disrupt a key interaction within the KMN network and likely destabilize the kinetochore signaling hub, disrupting mitosis. Therefore, this splicing variant is pathogenic and, in trans with a frameshift variant, causes the MCPH phenotype associated with KLN1. This finding furthers the association of splicing variants as a common pathogenic variant class for KNL1.
Keyphrases
  • intellectual disability
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • copy number
  • zika virus
  • body mass index
  • high throughput
  • small molecule
  • optical coherence tomography
  • network analysis
  • rna seq
  • single cell