Artículo de revista
A restricted spectrum of missense KMT2D variants cause a multiple malformations disorder distinct from Kabuki syndrome
Fecha
2020Registro en:
Genet Med. 2020 Jan 17.
10.1038/s41436-019-0743-3
Autor
Cuvertino, Sara
Hartill, Verity
Colyer, Alice
Garner, Terence
Nair, Nisha
Al-Gazali, Lihadh
Canham, Natalie
Faundes Gómez, Víctor
Flinter, Frances
Hertecant, Jozef
Holder Espinasse, Muriel
Jackson, Brian
Lynch, Sally Ann
Nadat, Fatima
Narasimhan, Vagheesh M.
Peckham, Michelle
Sellers, Robert
Seri, Marco
Montanari, Francesca
Southgate, Laura
Squeo, Gabriella Maria
Trembath, Richard
van Heel, David
Venuto, Santina
Weisberg, Daniel
Stals, Karen
Ellard, Sian
Barton, Anne
Kimber, Susan J.
Sheridan, Eamonn
Merla, Giuseppe
Stevens, Adam
Johnson, Colin A.
Banka, Siddharth
Institución
Resumen
Purpose To investigate if specific exon 38 or 39 KMT2D missense variants (MVs) cause a condition distinct from Kabuki syndrome type 1 (KS1). Methods Multiple individuals, with MVs in exons 38 or 39 of KMT2D that encode a highly conserved region of 54 amino acids flanked by Val3527 and Lys3583, were identified and phenotyped. Functional tests were performed to study their pathogenicity and understand the disease mechanism. Results The consistent clinical features of the affected individuals, from seven unrelated families, included choanal atresia, athelia or hypoplastic nipples, branchial sinus abnormalities, neck pits, lacrimal duct anomalies, hearing loss, external ear malformations, and thyroid abnormalities. None of the individuals had intellectual disability. The frequency of clinical features, objective software-based facial analysis metrics, and genome-wide peripheral blood DNA methylation patterns in these patients were significantly different from that of KS1. Circular dichroism spectroscopy indicated that these MVs perturb KMT2D secondary structure through an increased disordered to -helical transition. Conclusion KMT2D MVs located in a specific region spanning exons 38 and 39 and affecting highly conserved residues cause a novel multiple malformations syndrome distinct from KS1. Unlike KMT2D haploinsufficiency in KS1, these MVs likely result in disease through a dominant negative mechanism.