TY - JOUR
T1 - SPEN haploinsufficiency causes a neurodevelopmental disorder overlapping proximal 1p36 deletion syndrome with an episignature of X chromosomes in females
AU - SPEN study group
AU - Radio, Francesca Clementina
AU - Pang, Kaifang
AU - Ciolfi, Andrea
AU - Levy, Michael A
AU - Hernández-García, Andrés
AU - Pedace, Lucia
AU - Pantaleoni, Francesca
AU - Liu, Zhandong
AU - de Boer, Elke
AU - Jackson, Adam
AU - Bruselles, Alessandro
AU - McConkey, Haley
AU - Stellacci, Emilia
AU - Lo Cicero, Stefania
AU - Motta, Marialetizia
AU - Carrozzo, Rosalba
AU - Dentici, Maria Lisa
AU - McWalter, Kirsty
AU - Desai, Megha
AU - Monaghan, Kristin G
AU - Telegrafi, Aida
AU - Philippe, Christophe
AU - Vitobello, Antonio
AU - Au, Margaret
AU - Grand, Katheryn
AU - Sanchez-Lara, Pedro A
AU - Baez, Joanne
AU - Lindstrom, Kristin
AU - Kulch, Peggy
AU - Sebastian, Jessica
AU - Madan-Khetarpal, Suneeta
AU - Roadhouse, Chelsea
AU - MacKenzie, Jennifer J
AU - Monteleone, Berrin
AU - Jean Cuevas, July K
AU - Cross, Laura
AU - Zhou, Dihong
AU - Hartley, Taila
AU - Sawyer, Sarah L
AU - Monteiro, Fabíola Paoli
AU - Secches, Tania Vertemati
AU - Kok, Fernando
AU - Schultz-Rogers, Laura E
AU - Macke, Erica L
AU - Morava, Eva
AU - Klee, Eric W
AU - Kemppainen, Jennifer
AU - Iascone, Maria
AU - Kerr, Bronwyn
AU - Banka, Siddharth
N1 - Copyright © 2021 American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/2/16
Y1 - 2021/2/16
N2 - Deletion 1p36 (del1p36) syndrome is the most common human disorder resulting from a terminal autosomal deletion. This condition is molecularly and clinically heterogeneous. Deletions involving two non-overlapping regions, known as the distal (telomeric) and proximal (centromeric) critical regions, are sufficient to cause the majority of the recurrent clinical features, although with different facial features and dysmorphisms. SPEN encodes a transcriptional repressor commonly deleted in proximal del1p36 syndrome and is located centromeric to the proximal 1p36 critical region. Here, we used clinical data from 34 individuals with truncating variants in SPEN to define a neurodevelopmental disorder presenting with features that overlap considerably with those of proximal del1p36 syndrome. The clinical profile of this disease includes developmental delay/intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder, anxiety, aggressive behavior, attention deficit disorder, hypotonia, brain and spine anomalies, congenital heart defects, high/narrow palate, facial dysmorphisms, and obesity/increased BMI, especially in females. SPEN also emerges as a relevant gene for del1p36 syndrome by co-expression analyses. Finally, we show that haploinsufficiency of SPEN is associated with a distinctive DNA methylation episignature of the X chromosome in affected females, providing further evidence of a specific contribution of the protein to the epigenetic control of this chromosome, and a paradigm of an X chromosome-specific episignature that classifies syndromic traits. We conclude that SPEN is required for multiple developmental processes and SPEN haploinsufficiency is a major contributor to a disorder associated with deletions centromeric to the previously established 1p36 critical regions.
AB - Deletion 1p36 (del1p36) syndrome is the most common human disorder resulting from a terminal autosomal deletion. This condition is molecularly and clinically heterogeneous. Deletions involving two non-overlapping regions, known as the distal (telomeric) and proximal (centromeric) critical regions, are sufficient to cause the majority of the recurrent clinical features, although with different facial features and dysmorphisms. SPEN encodes a transcriptional repressor commonly deleted in proximal del1p36 syndrome and is located centromeric to the proximal 1p36 critical region. Here, we used clinical data from 34 individuals with truncating variants in SPEN to define a neurodevelopmental disorder presenting with features that overlap considerably with those of proximal del1p36 syndrome. The clinical profile of this disease includes developmental delay/intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder, anxiety, aggressive behavior, attention deficit disorder, hypotonia, brain and spine anomalies, congenital heart defects, high/narrow palate, facial dysmorphisms, and obesity/increased BMI, especially in females. SPEN also emerges as a relevant gene for del1p36 syndrome by co-expression analyses. Finally, we show that haploinsufficiency of SPEN is associated with a distinctive DNA methylation episignature of the X chromosome in affected females, providing further evidence of a specific contribution of the protein to the epigenetic control of this chromosome, and a paradigm of an X chromosome-specific episignature that classifies syndromic traits. We conclude that SPEN is required for multiple developmental processes and SPEN haploinsufficiency is a major contributor to a disorder associated with deletions centromeric to the previously established 1p36 critical regions.
U2 - 10.1016/j.ajhg.2021.01.015
DO - 10.1016/j.ajhg.2021.01.015
M3 - Article
C2 - 33596411
SN - 0002-9297
JO - American Journal of Human Genetics
JF - American Journal of Human Genetics
ER -