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Population-level deficit of homozygosity unveils CPSF3 as an intellectual disability syndrome gene.

Gudny Anna ArnadottirAsmundur OddssonBrynjar O JenssonSvanborg GisladottirMariella T SimonAsgeir O ArnthorssonHildigunnur KatrinardottirRun FridriksdottirErna V IvarsdottirAdalbjorg JonasdottirAslaug JonasdottirRebekah BarrickJona SaemundsdottirLouise le RouxGudjon R OskarssonJurate AsmundssonThora SteffensenKjartan R GudmundssonPetur LudvigssonJon J JonssonGisli MassonIngileif JónsdóttirHilma HólmJon G JonassonOlafur Th MagnussonOlafur ThorarensenJose AbdenurGudmundur L NorddahlDaníel F GuðbjartssonHans T BjornssonUnnur ThorsteinsdottirPatrick SulemKári Stefánsson
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Predicting the pathogenicity of biallelic missense variants can be challenging. Here, we use a deficit of observed homozygous carriers of missense variants, versus an expected number in a set of 153,054 chip-genotyped Icelanders, to identify potentially pathogenic genotypes. We follow three missense variants with a complete deficit of homozygosity and find that their pathogenic effect in homozygous state ranges from severe childhood disease to early embryonic lethality. One of these variants is in CPSF3, a gene not previously linked to disease. From a set of clinically sequenced Icelanders, and by sequencing archival samples targeted through the Icelandic genealogy, we find four homozygous carriers. Additionally, we find two homozygous carriers of Mexican descent of another missense variant in CPSF3. All six homozygous carriers of missense variants in CPSF3 show severe intellectual disability, seizures, microcephaly, and abnormal muscle tone. Here, we show how the absence of certain homozygous genotypes from a large population set can elucidate causes of previously unexplained recessive diseases and early miscarriage.
Keyphrases
  • intellectual disability
  • copy number
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • genome wide
  • early onset
  • dna methylation
  • escherichia coli
  • single cell
  • cystic fibrosis
  • case report
  • young adults