Variant ATRX Syndrome with Dysfunction of ATRX and MAGT1 Genes |
| |
Authors: | Jiadi Wen Gillian Carpenter Robert Wildin E. Magda Price Richard J. Gibbons Jennifer Eichmeyer Ruby Jiang Barbara DuPont Sally Martell Suzanne M. E. Lewis Wendy P. Robinson Mark O'Driscoll Federica I. Wolf Michael E. Zwick Evica Rajcan‐Separovic |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Pathology, University of British Columbia (UBC), Vancouver, BC, Canada;2. Human DNA Damage Response Disorders Group, Genome Damage & Stability Centre, University of Sussex, Sussex, UK;3. St Lukes Hospital, Boise, Idaho, USA;4. Department of Medical Genetics, UBC, Vancouver, BC, Canada;5. Child and Family Research Institute, Vancouver, BC, Canada;6. Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, UBC, Vancouver, BC, Canada;7. MRC Molecular Hematology Unit, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK;8. Greenwood Genetic Center, Greenwood, South Carolina;9. Istituto di Patologia Generale, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Rome, Italy;10. Department of Human Genetics, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia |
| |
Abstract: | A 0.8kb intronic duplication in MAGT1 and a single base pair deletion in the last exon of ATRX were identified using a chromosome X‐specific microarray and exome sequencing in a family with five males demonstrating intellectual disability (ID) and unusual skin findings (e.g., generalized pruritus). MAGT1 is an Mg2+ transporter previously associated with primary immunodeficiency and ID, whereas mutations in ATRX cause ATRX‐ID syndrome. In patient cells, the function of ATRX was demonstrated to be abnormal based on altered RNA/protein expression, hypomethylation of rDNA, and abnormal cytokinesis. Dysfunction of MAGT1 was reflected in reduced RNA/protein expression and Mg2+ influx. The mutation in ATRX most likely explains the ID, whereas MAGT1 disruption could be linked to abnormal skin findings, as normal magnesium homeostasis is necessary for skin health. This work supports observations that multiple mutations collectively contribute to the phenotypic variability of syndromic ID, and emphasizes the importance of correlating clinical phenotype with genomic and cell function analyses. |
| |
Keywords: | ATRX MAGT1 intellectual disability CNV exome chromosome X |
|
|