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Browsing by Subject "X-linked disease"
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Item Non-coding cause of congenital heart defects: Abnormal RNA splicing with multiple isoforms as a mechanism for heterotaxy(Elsevier, 2024) Wells, John R.; Padua, Maria B.; Haaning, Allison M.; Smith, Amanda M.; Morris, Shaine A.; Tariq, Muhammad; Ware, Stephanie M.; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineHeterotaxy is a disorder characterized by severe congenital heart defects (CHDs) and abnormal left-right patterning in other thoracic or abdominal organs. Clinical and research-based genetic testing has previously focused on evaluation of coding variants to identify causes of CHDs, leaving non-coding causes of CHDs largely unknown. Variants in the transcription factor zinc finger of the cerebellum 3 (ZIC3) cause X-linked heterotaxy. We identified an X-linked heterotaxy pedigree without a coding variant in ZIC3. Whole-genome sequencing revealed a deep intronic variant (ZIC3 c.1224+3286A>G) predicted to alter RNA splicing. An in vitro minigene splicing assay confirmed the variant acts as a cryptic splice acceptor. CRISPR-Cas9 served to introduce the ZIC3 c.1224+3286A>G variant into human embryonic stem cells demonstrating pseudoexon inclusion caused by the variant. Surprisingly, Sanger sequencing of the resulting ZIC3 c.1224+3286A>G amplicons revealed several isoforms, many of which bypass the normal coding sequence of the third exon of ZIC3, causing a disruption of a DNA-binding domain and a nuclear localization signal. Short- and long-read mRNA sequencing confirmed these initial results and identified additional splicing patterns. Assessment of four isoforms determined abnormal functions in vitro and in vivo while treatment with a splice-blocking morpholino partially rescued ZIC3. These results demonstrate that pseudoexon inclusion in ZIC3 can cause heterotaxy and provide functional validation of non-coding disease causation. Our results suggest the importance of non-coding variants in heterotaxy and the need for improved methods to identify and classify non-coding variation that may contribute to CHDs.