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RESEARCH PRODUCT

HNRNPR Variants that Impair Homeobox Gene Expression Drive Developmental Disorders in Humans

Odile Boute-benejeanMarco LezzeriniAnge-line BruelAnge-line BruelChristel Thauvin-robinetChristel Thauvin-robinetFloor A. M. DuijkersRiekelt H. HoutkooperSilvana Van KoningsbruggenAlyson W. MacinnesWendela G. Leeuwenburgh-pronkAldo JongejanFrédéric Tran-mau-themFrédéric Tran-mau-themKristin G. MonaghanSusan SellSébastien MouttonSébastien MouttonGeorges E. JanssensAndrew McdonaldThomas SmolMarcin W. WlodarskiRoger L. LaddaLaurence Faivre

subject

TBX1MaleSpliceosomeHeterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteinDevelopmental DisabilitiesRNA SplicingBiologyHeterogeneous-Nuclear Ribonucleoproteins/geneticsHeterogeneous-Nuclear RibonucleoproteinsArticleWhole Exome Sequencing03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineExome SequencingGeneticsHumansGenes Homeobox/geneticsPreschoolHox geneChildGeneTranscription factorGenetics (clinical)RNA Splicing/genetics030304 developmental biologyGeneticsFibroblasts/metabolism0303 health sciencesHomeobox/geneticsGenes HomeoboxInfantFibroblastsOxidative StressPhenotypeGenesDevelopmental Disabilities/etiologyGene Expression RegulationChild PreschoolRNA splicingMutationHomeoboxFemale030217 neurology & neurosurgery

description

The heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (HNRNP) genes code for a set of RNA-binding proteins that function primarily in the spliceosome C complex. Pathogenic variants in these genes can drive neurodegeneration, through a mechanism involving excessive stress-granule formation, or developmental defects, through mechanisms that are not known. Here, we report four unrelated individuals who have truncating or missense variants in the same C-terminal region of hnRNPR and who have multisystem developmental defects including abnormalities of the brain and skeleton, dysmorphic facies, brachydactyly, seizures, and hypoplastic external genitalia. We further identified in the literature a fifth individual with a truncating variant. RNA sequencing of primary fibroblasts reveals that these HNRNPR variants drive significant changes in the expression of several homeobox genes, as well as other transcription factors, such as LHX9, TBX1, and multiple HOX genes, that are considered fundamental regulators of embryonic and gonad development. Higher levels of retained intronic HOX sequences and lost splicing events in the HOX cluster are observed in cells carrying HNRNPR variants, suggesting that impaired splicing is at least partially driving HOX deregulation. At basal levels, stress-granule formation appears normal in primary and transfected cells expressing HNRNPR variants. However, these cells reveal profound recovery defects, where stress granules fail to disassemble properly, after exposure to oxidative stress. This study establishes an essential role for HNRNPR in human development and points to a mechanism that may unify other “spliceosomopathies” linked to variants that drive multi-system congenital defects and are found in hnRNPs.

10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.03.024https://pure.amc.nl/en/publications/hnrnpr-variants-that-impair-homeobox-gene-expression-drive-developmental-disorders-in-humans(5e628e76-7445-4164-a42d-0de2f4500bea).html