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Monoallelic and Biallelic Variants in EMC1 Identified in Individuals with Global Developmental Delay,Hypotonia, Scoliosis,and Cerebellar Atrophy
Authors:Tamar Harel  Gozde Yesil  Yavuz Bayram  Zeynep Coban-Akdemir  Wu-Lin Charng  Ender Karaca  Ali Al?Asmari  Mohammad?K. Eldomery  Jill?V. Hunter  Shalini?N. Jhangiani  Jill?A. Rosenfeld  Davut Pehlivan  Ayman?W. El-Hattab  Mohammed?A. Saleh  Charles?A. LeDuc  Donna Muzny  Eric Boerwinkle  Baylor-Hopkins Center for Mendelian Genomics  Richard?A. Gibbs  Wendy?K. Chung  Yaping Yang  John?W. Belmont  James?R. Lupski
Abstract:The paradigm of a single gene associated with one specific phenotype and mode of inheritance has been repeatedly challenged. Genotype-phenotype correlations can often be traced to different mutation types, localization of the variants in distinct protein domains, or the trigger of or escape from nonsense-mediated decay. Using whole-exome sequencing, we identified homozygous variants in EMC1 that segregated with a phenotype of developmental delay, hypotonia, scoliosis, and cerebellar atrophy in three families. In addition, a de novo heterozygous EMC1 variant was seen in an individual with a similar clinical and MRI imaging phenotype. EMC1 encodes a member of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-membrane protein complex (EMC), an evolutionarily conserved complex that has been proposed to have multiple roles in ER-associated degradation, ER-mitochondria tethering, and proper assembly of multi-pass transmembrane proteins. Perturbations of protein folding and organelle crosstalk have been implicated in neurodegenerative processes including cerebellar atrophy. We propose EMC1 as a gene in which either biallelic or monoallelic variants might lead to a syndrome including intellectual disability and preferential degeneration of the cerebellum.
Keywords:Whole-exome sequencing   EMC1   endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-membrane complex   mitochondrial membrane   inter-organellar communication   intracellular transport   neurodegeneration   cerebellar atrophy
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