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Browsing by Author "Jain, Mahim"
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Item HNRNPC haploinsufficiency affects alternative splicing of intellectual disability-associated genes and causes a neurodevelopmental disorder(Elsevier, 2023) Niggl, Eva; Bouman, Arjan; Briere, Lauren C.; Hoogenboezem, Remco M.; Wallaard, Ilse; Park, Joohyun; Admard, Jakob; Wilke, Martina; Harris-Mostert, Emilio D. R. O.; Elgersma, Minetta; Bain, Jennifer; Balasubramanian, Meena; Banka, Siddharth; Benke, Paul J.; Bertrand, Miriam; Blesson, Alyssa E.; Clayton-Smith, Jill; Ellingford, Jamie M.; Gillentine, Madelyn A.; Goodloe, Dana H.; Haack, Tobias B.; Jain, Mahim; Krantz, Ian; Luu, Sharon M.; McPheron, Molly; Muss, Candace L.; Raible, Sarah E.; Robin, Nathaniel H.; Spiller, Michael; Starling, Susan; Sweetser, David A.; Thiffault, Isabelle; Vetrini, Francesco; Witt, Dennis; Woods, Emily; Zhou, Dihong; Genomics England Research Consortium; Undiagnosed Diseases Network; Elgersma, Ype; van Esbroeck, Annelot C. M.; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineHeterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein C (HNRNPC) is an essential, ubiquitously abundant protein involved in mRNA processing. Genetic variants in other members of the HNRNP family have been associated with neurodevelopmental disorders. Here, we describe 13 individuals with global developmental delay, intellectual disability, behavioral abnormalities, and subtle facial dysmorphology with heterozygous HNRNPC germline variants. Five of them bear an identical in-frame deletion of nine amino acids in the extreme C terminus. To study the effect of this recurrent variant as well as HNRNPC haploinsufficiency, we used induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and fibroblasts obtained from affected individuals. While protein localization and oligomerization were unaffected by the recurrent C-terminal deletion variant, total HNRNPC levels were decreased. Previously, reduced HNRNPC levels have been associated with changes in alternative splicing. Therefore, we performed a meta-analysis on published RNA-seq datasets of three different cell lines to identify a ubiquitous HNRNPC-dependent signature of alternative spliced exons. The identified signature was not only confirmed in fibroblasts obtained from an affected individual but also showed a significant enrichment for genes associated with intellectual disability. Hence, we assessed the effect of decreased and increased levels of HNRNPC on neuronal arborization and neuronal migration and found that either condition affects neuronal function. Taken together, our data indicate that HNRNPC haploinsufficiency affects alternative splicing of multiple intellectual disability-associated genes and that the developing brain is sensitive to aberrant levels of HNRNPC. Hence, our data strongly support the inclusion of HNRNPC to the family of HNRNP-related neurodevelopmental disorders.Item Pathogenic Variants in Fucokinase Cause a Congenital Disorder of Glycosylation(Elsevier, 2018-12-06) Ng, Bobby G.; Rosenfeld, Jill A.; Emrick, Lisa; Jain, Mahim; Burrage, Lindsay C.; Lee, Brendan; Craigen, William J.; Bearden, David R.; Graham, Brett H.; Freeze, Hudson H.; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineFUK encodes fucokinase, the only enzyme capable of converting L-fucose to fucose-1-phosphate, which will ultimately be used for synthesizing GDP-fucose, the donor substrate for all fucosyltransferases. Although it is essential for fucose salvage, this pathway is thought to make only a minor contribution to the total amount of GDP-fucose. A second pathway, the major de novo pathway, involves conversion of GDP-mannose to GDP-fucose. Here we describe two unrelated individuals who have pathogenic variants in FUK and who presented with severe developmental delays, encephalopathy, intractable seizures, and hypotonia. The first individual was compound heterozygous for c.667T>C (p.Ser223Pro) and c.2047C>T (p.Arg683Cys), and the second individual was homozygous for c.2980A>C (p.Lys994Gln). Skin fibroblasts from the first individual confirmed the variants as loss of function and showed significant decreases in total GDP-[3H] fucose and [3H] fucose-1-phosphate. There was also a decrease in the incorporation of [5,6-3H]-fucose into fucosylated glycoproteins. Lys994 has previously been shown to be an important site for ubiquitin conjugation. Here, we show that loss-of-function variants in FUK cause a congenital glycosylation disorder characterized by a defective fucose-salvage pathway.