Biallelic variants in GTF3C3 result in an autosomal recessive disorder with intellectual disability.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
January 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Author
De Hayr, Lachlan | |
Blok, Laura E R | |
Dias, Kerith-Rae | |
Long, Jingyi | |
Begemann, Anaïs | |
Moir, Robyn D | |
Willis, Ian M | |
Mocera, Martina | |
Siegel, Gabriele | |
Steindl, Katharina | |
Evans, Carey-Anne | |
Zhu, Ying | |
Zhang, Futao | |
Field, Michael | |
Ma, Alan | |
Adès, Lesley | |
Josephi-Taylor, Sarah | |
Pfundt, Rolph | |
Zaki, Maha S | |
Tomoum, Hoda | |
Laube, Julia | |
Reis, André | |
Maddirevula, Sateesh | |
Hashem, Mais O | |
Zweier, Markus | |
Alkuraya, Fowzan S | |
Maroofian, Reza | |
Buckley, Michael F | |
Gleeson, Joseph G | |
Coll-Tané, Mireia | |
Koolen, David A | |
Rauch, Anita | |
Roscioli, Tony | |
Schenck, Annette | |
Harvey, Robert J |
Subject(s)
Series
Genetics in Medicine
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1530-0366
1098-3600
Publisher
Elsevier
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
39636576
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
Purpose
This study details a novel syndromic form of autosomal recessive intellectual disability resulting from recessive variants in GTF3C3, encoding a key component of the DNA-binding transcription factor IIIC, which has a conserved role in RNA polymerase III-mediated transcription.
Methods
Exome sequencing, minigene analysis, molecular modeling, RNA polymerase III reporter gene assays, and Drosophila knockdown models were utilized to characterize GTF3C3 variants.
Results
Twelve affected individuals from 7 unrelated families were identified with homozygous or compound heterozygous missense variants in GTF3C3 including c.503C>T p.(Ala168Val), c.1268T>C p.(Leu423Pro), c.1436A>G p.(Tyr479Cys), c.2419C>T p.(Arg807Cys), and c.2420G>A p.(Arg807His). The cohort presented with intellectual disability, variable nonfamilial facial features, motor impairments, seizures, and cerebellar/corpus callosum malformations. Consistent with disruptions in intra- and intermolecular interactions observed in molecular modeling, RNA polymerase III reporter assays confirmed that the majority of missense variants resulted in a loss of function. Minigene analysis of the recurrent c.503C>T p.(Ala168Val) variant confirmed the introduction of a cryptic donor site into exon 4, resulting in mRNA missplicing. Consistent with the clinical features of this cohort, neuronal loss of Gtf3c3 in Drosophila induced seizure-like behavior, motor impairment, and learning deficits.
Conclusion
These findings confirm that GTF3C3 variants result in an autosomal recessive form of syndromic intellectual disability.
This study details a novel syndromic form of autosomal recessive intellectual disability resulting from recessive variants in GTF3C3, encoding a key component of the DNA-binding transcription factor IIIC, which has a conserved role in RNA polymerase III-mediated transcription.
Methods
Exome sequencing, minigene analysis, molecular modeling, RNA polymerase III reporter gene assays, and Drosophila knockdown models were utilized to characterize GTF3C3 variants.
Results
Twelve affected individuals from 7 unrelated families were identified with homozygous or compound heterozygous missense variants in GTF3C3 including c.503C>T p.(Ala168Val), c.1268T>C p.(Leu423Pro), c.1436A>G p.(Tyr479Cys), c.2419C>T p.(Arg807Cys), and c.2420G>A p.(Arg807His). The cohort presented with intellectual disability, variable nonfamilial facial features, motor impairments, seizures, and cerebellar/corpus callosum malformations. Consistent with disruptions in intra- and intermolecular interactions observed in molecular modeling, RNA polymerase III reporter assays confirmed that the majority of missense variants resulted in a loss of function. Minigene analysis of the recurrent c.503C>T p.(Ala168Val) variant confirmed the introduction of a cryptic donor site into exon 4, resulting in mRNA missplicing. Consistent with the clinical features of this cohort, neuronal loss of Gtf3c3 in Drosophila induced seizure-like behavior, motor impairment, and learning deficits.
Conclusion
These findings confirm that GTF3C3 variants result in an autosomal recessive form of syndromic intellectual disability.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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1-s2.0-S1098360024001874-main.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 3.84 MB | published |