학술논문

De Novo Pathogenic Variants in N-cadherin Cause a Syndromic Neurodevelopmental Disorder with Corpus Collosum, Axon, Cardiac, Ocular, and Genital Defects
Document Type
article
Author
Accogli, AndreaCalabretta, SaraSt-Onge, JudithBoudrahem-Addour, NassimaDionne-Laporte, AlexandreJoset, PascalAzzarello-Burri, SilviaRauch, AnitaKrier, JoelFieg, ElizabethPallais, Juan CNetwork, Undiagnosed DiseasesAcosta, Maria TAdams, David RAgrawal, PankajAlejandro, Mercedes EAllard, PatrickAlvey, JustinAndrews, AshleyAshley, Euan AAzamian, Mahshid SBacino, Carlos ABademci, GuneyBaker, EvaBalasubramanyam, AshokBaldridge, DustinBale, JimBarbouth, DeborahBatzli, Gabriel FBayrak-Toydemir, PinarBeggs, Alan HBejerano, GillBellen, Hugo JBernstein, Jonathan ABerry, Gerard TBican, AnnaBick, David PBirch, Camille LBivona, StephanieBohnsack, JohnBonnenmann, CarstenBonner, DevonBoone, Braden EBostwick, Bret LBotto, LorenzoBriere, Lauren CBrokamp, EllyBrown, Donna MBrush, MatthewBurke, Elizabeth ABurrage, Lindsay CButte, Manish JCarey, JohnCarrasquillo, OlveenChang, Ta Chen PeterChao, Hsiao-TuanClark, Gary DCoakley, Terra RCobban, Laurel ACogan, Joy DCole, F SessionsColley, Heather ACooper, Cynthia MCope, HeidiCraigen, William JD’Souza, PrecillaDasari, SurendraDavids, MariskaDayal, Jyoti GDell’Angelica, Esteban CDhar, Shweta UDorrani, NaghmehDorset, Daniel CDouine, Emilie DDraper, David DDuncan, LauraEckstein, David JEmrick, Lisa TEng, Christine MEsteves, CeciliaEstwick, TyraFernandez, LilianaFerreira, CarlosFieg, Elizabeth LFisher, Paul GFogel, Brent LForghani, IrmanFresard, LaureGahl, William AGodfrey, Rena AGoldman, Alica MGoldstein, David BGourdine, Jean-Philippe FGrajewski, AlanaGroden, Catherine AGropman, Andrea LHaendel, MelissaHamid, RizwanHanchard, Neil AHayes, Nichole
Source
American Journal of Human Genetics. 105(4)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Genetics
Biological Sciences
Neurosciences
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Axons
Cadherins
Corpus Callosum
Eye
Frameshift Mutation
Genitalia
Heart Defects
Congenital
Heterozygote
Humans
Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Undiagnosed Diseases Network
ACOG
CDH2
N-cadherin
cardiac defects
cell-cell adhesion
corpus callosum
eye defects
genital defects
intellectual disability
Medical and Health Sciences
Genetics & Heredity
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
Cadherins constitute a family of transmembrane proteins that mediate calcium-dependent cell-cell adhesion. The extracellular domain of cadherins consists of extracellular cadherin (EC) domains, separated by calcium binding sites. The EC interacts with other cadherin molecules in cis and in trans to mechanically hold apposing cell surfaces together. CDH2 encodes N-cadherin, whose essential roles in neural development include neuronal migration and axon pathfinding. However, CDH2 has not yet been linked to a Mendelian neurodevelopmental disorder. Here, we report de novo heterozygous pathogenic variants (seven missense, two frameshift) in CDH2 in nine individuals with a syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by global developmental delay and/or intellectual disability, variable axon pathfinding defects (corpus callosum agenesis or hypoplasia, mirror movements, Duane anomaly), and ocular, cardiac, and genital anomalies. All seven missense variants (c.1057G>A [p.Asp353Asn]; c.1789G>A [p.Asp597Asn]; c.1789G>T [p.Asp597Tyr]; c.1802A>C [p.Asn601Thr]; c.1839C>G [p.Cys613Trp]; c.1880A>G [p.Asp627Gly]; c.2027A>G [p.Tyr676Cys]) result in substitution of highly conserved residues, and six of seven cluster within EC domains 4 and 5. Four of the substitutions affect the calcium-binding site in the EC4-EC5 interdomain. We show that cells expressing these variants in the EC4-EC5 domains have a defect in cell-cell adhesion; this defect includes impaired binding in trans with N-cadherin-WT expressed on apposing cells. The two frameshift variants (c.2563_2564delCT [p.Leu855Valfs∗4]; c.2564_2567dupTGTT [p.Leu856Phefs∗5]) are predicted to lead to a truncated cytoplasmic domain. Our study demonstrates that de novo heterozygous variants in CDH2 impair the adhesive activity of N-cadherin, resulting in a multisystemic developmental disorder, that could be named ACOG syndrome (agenesis of corpus callosum, axon pathfinding, cardiac, ocular, and genital defects).