Van De Weghe Julie C, Rusterholz Tamara D S, Latour Brooke, Grout Megan E, Aldinger Kimberly A, Shaheen Ranad, Dempsey Jennifer C, Maddirevula Sateesh, Cheng Yong-Han H, Phelps Ian G, Gesemann Matthias, Goel Himanshu, Birk Ohad S, Alanzi Talal, Rawashdeh Rifaat, Khan Arif O, Bamshad Michael J, Nickerson Deborah A, Neuhauss Stephan C F, Dobyns William B, Alkuraya Fowzan S, Roepman Ronald, Bachmann-Gagescu Ruxandra, Doherty Dan
Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Institute of Molecular Life Sciences, University of Zurich, 8057 Zurich, Switzerland.
Am J Hum Genet. 2017 Jul 6;101(1):23-36. doi: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.05.010. Epub 2017 Jun 15.
Joubert syndrome (JS) is a recessive neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by hypotonia, ataxia, abnormal eye movements, and variable cognitive impairment. It is defined by a distinctive brain malformation known as the "molar tooth sign" on axial MRI. Subsets of affected individuals have malformations such as coloboma, polydactyly, and encephalocele, as well as progressive retinal dystrophy, fibrocystic kidney disease, and liver fibrosis. More than 35 genes have been associated with JS, but in a subset of families the genetic cause remains unknown. All of the gene products localize in and around the primary cilium, making JS a canonical ciliopathy. Ciliopathies are unified by their overlapping clinical features and underlying mechanisms involving ciliary dysfunction. In this work, we identify biallelic rare, predicted-deleterious ARMC9 variants (stop-gain, missense, splice-site, and single-exon deletion) in 11 individuals with JS from 8 families, accounting for approximately 1% of the disorder. The associated phenotypes range from isolated neurological involvement to JS with retinal dystrophy, additional brain abnormalities (e.g., heterotopia, Dandy-Walker malformation), pituitary insufficiency, and/or synpolydactyly. We show that ARMC9 localizes to the basal body of the cilium and is upregulated during ciliogenesis. Typical ciliopathy phenotypes (curved body shape, retinal dystrophy, coloboma, and decreased cilia) in a CRISPR/Cas9-engineered zebrafish mutant model provide additional support for ARMC9 as a ciliopathy-associated gene. Identifying ARMC9 mutations as a cause of JS takes us one step closer to a full genetic understanding of this important disorder and enables future functional work to define the central biological mechanisms underlying JS and other ciliopathies.
乔伯特综合征(JS)是一种隐性神经发育障碍,其特征为肌张力减退、共济失调、眼球运动异常以及程度不一的认知障碍。轴向磁共振成像(MRI)上一种独特的脑畸形,即“磨牙征”可对其进行定义。部分受影响个体还存在诸如虹膜缺损、多指(趾)畸形和脑膨出等畸形,以及进行性视网膜营养不良、纤维囊性肾病和肝纤维化。超过35个基因已被证实与JS相关,但在一部分家庭中,遗传病因仍不明。所有这些基因产物均定位于初级纤毛及其周围,这使得JS成为一种典型的纤毛病。纤毛病因其重叠的临床特征和涉及纤毛功能障碍的潜在机制而具有统一性。在本研究中,我们在来自8个家庭的11名JS患者中鉴定出双等位基因罕见的、预测具有有害性的ARMC9变异(无义突变、错义突变、剪接位点突变和单外显子缺失),约占该疾病的1%。相关表型范围从单纯的神经系统受累到伴有视网膜营养不良、额外脑异常(如异位、丹迪-沃克畸形)、垂体功能不全和/或并指(趾)畸形的JS。我们发现ARMC9定位于纤毛的基体,并在纤毛发生过程中上调。在CRISPR/Cas9基因编辑的斑马鱼突变模型中出现的典型纤毛病表型(弯曲的身体形态、视网膜营养不良、虹膜缺损和纤毛减少)为ARMC9作为一种与纤毛病相关的基因提供了额外支持。将ARMC9突变鉴定为JS的病因使我们朝着全面了解这一重要疾病的遗传学迈出了一步,并为未来确定JS和其他纤毛病潜在核心生物学机制的功能研究奠定了基础。