Neurodevelopmental Disorder Caused by Deletion of , a lncRNA Gene.
Authors | |
Abstract | encodes a human long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) adjacent to , a coding gene in which de novo loss-of-function variants cause developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. Here, we report our findings in three unrelated children with a syndromic, early-onset neurodevelopmental disorder, each of whom had a de novo deletion in the locus. The children had severe encephalopathy, shared facial dysmorphisms, cortical atrophy, and cerebral hypomyelination - a phenotype that is distinct from the phenotypes of patients with haploinsufficiency. We found that the deletion results in increased CHD2 protein abundance in patient-derived cell lines and increased expression of the transcript in . These findings indicate that has bidirectional dosage sensitivity in human disease, and we recommend that other lncRNA-encoding genes be evaluated, particularly those upstream of genes associated with mendelian disorders. (Funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute and others.). |
Year of Publication | 2024
|
Journal | The New England journal of medicine
|
Volume | 391
|
Issue | 16
|
Pages | 1511-1518
|
Date Published | 10/2024
|
ISSN | 1533-4406
|
DOI | 10.1056/NEJMoa2400718
|
PubMed ID | 39442041
|
Links |