A Biallelic Truncating Variant in the TPR Domain of GEMIN5 Associated with Intellectual Disability and Cerebral Atrophy.
Nazia IbrahimShagufta NazFrancesca MattioliNicolas GuexSaima SharifAfia IqbalMuhammad AnsarAlexandre ReymondPublished in: Genes (2023)
GEMIN5 is a multifunctional RNA-binding protein required for the assembly of survival motor neurons. Several bi-allelic truncating and missense variants in this gene are reported to cause a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by cerebellar atrophy, intellectual disability (ID), and motor dysfunction. Whole exome sequencing of a Pakistani consanguineous family with three brothers affected by ID, cerebral atrophy, mobility, and speech impairment revealed a novel homozygous 3bp-deletion NM_015465.5:c.3162_3164del that leads to the loss of NM_015465.5 (NP_056280.2):p. (Asp1054_Ala1055delinsGlu) amino acid in one of the α-helixes of the tetratricopeptide repeats of GEMIN5. In silico 3D representations of the GEMIN5 dimerization domain show that this variant likely affects the orientation of the downstream sidechains out of the helix axis, which would affect the packing with neighboring helices. The phenotype of all affected siblings overlaps well with previously reported patients, suggesting that NM_015465.5: c.3162_3164del (NP_056280.2):p. (Asp1054_Ala1055delinsGlu) is a novel GEMIN5 pathogenic variant. Overall, our data expands the molecular and clinical phenotype of the recently described neurodevelopmental disorder with cerebellar atrophy and motor dysfunction (NEDCAM) syndrome.
Keyphrases
- intellectual disability
- autism spectrum disorder
- photodynamic therapy
- end stage renal disease
- binding protein
- newly diagnosed
- oxidative stress
- amino acid
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- ejection fraction
- copy number
- chronic kidney disease
- spinal cord
- peritoneal dialysis
- electronic health record
- drug delivery
- prognostic factors
- molecular dynamics simulations
- gene expression
- congenital heart disease
- genome wide
- single molecule
- cancer therapy
- case report
- free survival
- machine learning
- patient reported
- genome wide analysis