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De novo variants in FBXO11 cause a syndromic form of intellectual disability with behavioral problems and dysmorphisms.

Sandra JansenIlse M van der WerfA Micheil InnesAlexandra AfenjarPankaj B AgrawalIlse J AndersonPaldeep S AtwalEllen van BinsbergenMarie-José van den BoogaardLucia CastigliaZeynep H Coban-AkdemirAnke van DijckDiane DoummarAlbertien M van EerdeAnthonie J van EssenKoen L van GassenMaria J Guillen SacotoMieke M van HaelstIvan IossifovJessica L JacksonElizabeth JuddCharu KaiwarBoris KerenEric W KleeJolien S Klein Wassink-RuiterMarije E MeuwissenKristin G MonaghanSonja A de MunnikCaroline NavaCharlotte W OckeloenRosa PettinatoHilary RacherTuula RinneCorrado RomanoVictoria R SandersRhonda E SchnurEric J SmeetsAlexander P A StegmannAsbjørg Stray-PedersenDavid A SweetserPaulien A TerhalKristian TvetenGrace E VanNoyPetra F de VriesJessica L WaxlerMarcia WillingRolph PfundtJoris A VeltmanR Frank KooyLisenka E L M VissersBert B A de Vries
Published in: European journal of human genetics : EJHG (2019)
Determining pathogenicity of genomic variation identified by next-generation sequencing techniques can be supported by recurrent disruptive variants in the same gene in phenotypically similar individuals. However, interpretation of novel variants in a specific gene in individuals with mild-moderate intellectual disability (ID) without recognizable syndromic features can be challenging and reverse phenotyping is often required. We describe 24 individuals with a de novo disease-causing variant in, or partial deletion of, the F-box only protein 11 gene (FBXO11, also known as VIT1 and PRMT9). FBXO11 is part of the SCF (SKP1-cullin-F-box) complex, a multi-protein E3 ubiquitin-ligase complex catalyzing the ubiquitination of proteins destined for proteasomal degradation. Twenty-two variants were identified by next-generation sequencing, comprising 2 in-frame deletions, 11 missense variants, 1 canonical splice site variant, and 8 nonsense or frameshift variants leading to a truncated protein or degraded transcript. The remaining two variants were identified by array-comparative genomic hybridization and consisted of a partial deletion of FBXO11. All individuals had borderline to severe ID and behavioral problems (autism spectrum disorder, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, anxiety, aggression) were observed in most of them. The most relevant common facial features included a thin upper lip and a broad prominent space between the paramedian peaks of the upper lip. Other features were hypotonia and hyperlaxity of the joints. We show that de novo variants in FBXO11 cause a syndromic form of ID. The current series show the power of reverse phenotyping in the interpretation of novel genetic variances in individuals who initially did not appear to have a clear recognizable phenotype.
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