Mutation-specific pathophysiological mechanisms define different neurodevelopmental disorders associated with SATB1 dysfunction.
Whereas large-scale statistical analyses can robustly identify disease-gene relationships, they do not accurately capture genotype-phenotype correlations or disease mechanisms. We use multiple lines of independent evidence to show that different variant types in a single gene, SATB1, cause clinically overlapping but distinct neurodevelopmental disorders. Clinical evaluation of 42 individuals carrying SATB1 variants identified overt genotype-phenotype relationships, associated with different pathophysiological mechanisms, established by functional assays. Missense variants in the CUT1 and CUT2 DNA-binding domains result in stronger chromatin binding, increased transcriptional repression, and a severe phenotype. In contrast, variants predicted to result in haploinsufficiency are associated with a milder clinical presentation. A similarly mild phenotype is observed for individuals with premature protein truncating variants that escape nonsense-mediated decay, which are transcriptionally active but mislocalized in the cell. Our results suggest that in-depth mutation-specific genotype-phenotype studies are essential to capture full disease complexity and to explain phenotypic variability.
Copyright © 2021 American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Overview publication
Title | Mutation-specific pathophysiological mechanisms define different neurodevelopmental disorders associated with SATB1 dysfunction. |
Date | 2021-02-04 |
Issue name | American journal of human genetics |
Issue number | v108.2:346-356 |
DOI | 10.1016/j.ajhg.2021.01.007 |
PubMed | 33513338 |
Authors | |
Keywords | HPO-based analysis, SATB1, cell-based functional assays, de novo variants, intellectual disability, neurodevelopmental disorders, seizures, teeth abnormalities |
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