Tatton-Brown, K;
Loveday, C;
Yost, S;
Clarke, M;
Ramsay, E;
Zachariou, A;
Elliott, A;
Wylie, H;
Ardissone, A;
Rittinger, O;
et al.
Tatton-Brown, K; Loveday, C; Yost, S; Clarke, M; Ramsay, E; Zachariou, A; Elliott, A; Wylie, H; Ardissone, A; Rittinger, O; Stewart, F; Temple, IK; Cole, T; Childhood Overgrowth Collaboration; Mahamdallie, S; Seal, S; Ruark, E; Rahman, N
(2017)
Mutations in Epigenetic Regulation Genes Are a Major Cause of Overgrowth with Intellectual Disability.
Am J Hum Genet, 100 (5).
pp. 725-736.
ISSN 1537-6605
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.03.010
SGUL Authors: Tatton-Brown, Katrina Louise
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Abstract
To explore the genetic architecture of human overgrowth syndromes and human growth control, we performed experimental and bioinformatic analyses of 710 individuals with overgrowth (height and/or head circumference ≥+2 SD) and intellectual disability (OGID). We identified a causal mutation in 1 of 14 genes in 50% (353/710). This includes HIST1H1E, encoding histone H1.4, which has not been associated with a developmental disorder previously. The pathogenic HIST1H1E mutations are predicted to result in a product that is less effective in neutralizing negatively charged linker DNA because it has a reduced net charge, and in DNA binding and protein-protein interactions because key residues are truncated. Functional network analyses demonstrated that epigenetic regulation is a prominent biological process dysregulated in individuals with OGID. Mutations in six epigenetic regulation genes-NSD1, EZH2, DNMT3A, CHD8, HIST1H1E, and EED-accounted for 44% of individuals (311/710). There was significant overlap between the 14 genes involved in OGID and 611 genes in regions identified in GWASs to be associated with height (p = 6.84 × 10-8), suggesting that a common variation impacting function of genes involved in OGID influences height at a population level. Increased cellular growth is a hallmark of cancer and there was striking overlap between the genes involved in OGID and 260 somatically mutated cancer driver genes (p = 1.75 × 10-14). However, the mutation spectra of genes involved in OGID and cancer differ, suggesting complex genotype-phenotype relationships. These data reveal insights into the genetic control of human growth and demonstrate that exome sequencing in OGID has a high diagnostic yield.
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