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Identification of Intellectual Disability Genes in Female Patients with A Skewed X Inactivation Pattern

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

Intellectual disability (ID) is a heterogeneous disorder with an unknown molecular etiology in many cases. Previously, X-linked ID (XLID) studies focused on males due to the hemizygous state of their X chromosome. Carrier females are generally unaffected due to the presence of a second normal allele, or inactivation of the mutant X chromosome in most of their cells (skewing). However, in female ID patients, we hypothesized that the presence of skewing of X-inactivation would be an indicator for an X chromosomal ID cause. We analysed the X-inactivation patterns of 288 females with ID, and found that 22 (7.6%) had extreme skewing (> 90%), which is significantly higher than observed in the general population (3.6%; p = 0.029). Whole exome sequencing of 19 females with extreme skewing revealed causal variants in 6 females in the XLID genes DDX3X, NHS, WDR45, MECP2 and SMC1A. Interestingly, variants in genes escaping X-inactivation presumably cause both XLID and skewing of X-inactivation in 3 of these patients. Moreover, variants likely accounting for skewing only, were detected in MED12, HDAC8 and TAF9B. All tested candidate causative variants were de novo events. Hence, extreme skewing is a good indicator for the presence of X-linked variants in female patients. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Journal: Human Mutation
ISSN: 1059-7794
Issue: 8
Volume: 37
Pages: 804 - 811
Publication year:2016
BOF-keylabel:yes
IOF-keylabel:yes
BOF-publication weight:2
CSS-citation score:2
Authors:International
Authors from:Government, Higher Education
Accessibility:Closed