학술논문

Functional characterization of a novel PBX1 de novo missense variant identified in a patient with syndromic congenital heart disease.
Document Type
article
Source
Human Molecular Genetics. 29(7)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Genetics
Rare Diseases
Congenital Structural Anomalies
Pediatric
Cardiovascular
Heart Disease
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Congenital
Adult
Animals
CRISPR-Cas Systems
Disease Models
Animal
Exome
Female
Heart Defects
Congenital
Heterozygote
Humans
Infant
Male
Mice
Mutation
Missense
Pedigree
Phenotype
Pre-B-Cell Leukemia Transcription Factor 1
Truncus Arteriosus
Persistent
Exome Sequencing
Medical and Health Sciences
Genetics & Heredity
Language
Abstract
Pre-B cell leukemia factor 1 (PBX1) is an essential developmental transcription factor, mutations in which have recently been associated with CAKUTHED syndrome, characterized by multiple congenital defects including congenital heart disease (CHD). During analysis of a whole-exome-sequenced cohort of heterogeneous CHD patients, we identified a de novo missense variant, PBX1:c.551G>C p.R184P, in a patient with tetralogy of Fallot with absent pulmonary valve and extra-cardiac phenotypes. Functional analysis of this variant by creating a CRISPR-Cas9 gene-edited mouse model revealed multiple congenital anomalies. Congenital heart defects (persistent truncus arteriosus and ventricular septal defect), hypoplastic lungs, hypoplastic/ectopic kidneys, aplastic adrenal glands and spleen, as well as atretic trachea and palate defects were observed in the homozygous mutant embryos at multiple stages of development. We also observed developmental anomalies in a proportion of heterozygous embryos, suggestive of a dominant mode of inheritance. Analysis of gene expression and protein levels revealed that although Pbx1 transcripts are higher in homozygotes, amounts of PBX1 protein are significantly decreased. Here, we have presented the first functional model of a missense PBX1 variant and provided strong evidence that p.R184P is disease-causal. Our findings also expand the phenotypic spectrum associated with pathogenic PBX1 variants in both humans and mice.