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CNTNAP2 and NRXN1 Are Mutated in Autosomal-Recessive Pitt-Hopkins-like Mental Retardation and Determine the Level of a Common Synaptic Protein in Drosophila
Authors:Christiane Zweier,Eiko K. de Jong,Alfredo Orrico,Amanda L. Collins,Merel A.W. Oortveld,André   Reis,Anita Rauch
Affiliation:1 Institute of Human Genetics, Friedrich Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg, 91054 Erlangen, Germany
2 Department of Human Genetics, Nijmegen Centre for Molecular Life Sciences, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour & Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, 6525 GA Nijmegen, The Netherlands
3 Unita Operativa Medicina Molecolare, Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Senese, Policlinico S. Maria alle Scotte, 53100 Siena, Italy
4 Department of Clinical Genetics, Odense University Hospital, 5000 Odense C, Denmark
5 Wessex Clinical Genetics Service, Princess Anne Hospital, Southampton, SO16 5YA, UK
6 Department of Clinical Genetics, Leiden University Medical Centre, 2300 RC Leiden, The Netherlands
7 Institute of Medical Genetics, University of Zurich, 8603 Zurich-Schwerzenbach, Switzerland
Abstract:Heterozygous copy-number variants and SNPs of CNTNAP2 and NRXN1, two distantly related members of the neurexin superfamily, have been repeatedly associated with a wide spectrum of neuropsychiatric disorders, such as developmental language disorders, autism spectrum disorders, epilepsy, and schizophrenia. We now identified homozygous and compound-heterozygous deletions and mutations via molecular karyotyping and mutational screening in CNTNAP2 and NRXN1 in four patients with severe mental retardation (MR) and variable features, such as autistic behavior, epilepsy, and breathing anomalies, phenotypically overlapping with Pitt-Hopkins syndrome. With a frequency of at least 1% in our cohort of 179 patients, recessive defects in CNTNAP2 appear to significantly contribute to severe MR. Whereas the established synaptic role of NRXN1 suggests that synaptic defects contribute to the associated neuropsychiatric disorders and to severe MR as reported here, evidence for a synaptic role of the CNTNAP2-encoded protein CASPR2 has so far been lacking. Using Drosophila as a model, we now show that, as known for fly Nrx-I, the CASPR2 ortholog Nrx-IV might also localize to synapses. Overexpression of either protein can reorganize synaptic morphology and induce increased density of active zones, the synaptic domains of neurotransmitter release. Moreover, both Nrx-I and Nrx-IV determine the level of the presynaptic active-zone protein bruchpilot, indicating a possible common molecular mechanism in Nrx-I and Nrx-IV mutant conditions. We therefore propose that an analogous shared synaptic mechanism contributes to the similar clinical phenotypes resulting from defects in human NRXN1 and CNTNAP2.
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