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A Novel Pus7 Mutation Causes Intellectual Disability With Autistic and Aggressive Behaviors Publisher



Darvish H1, 2 ; Azcona LJ3, 4 ; Alehabib E2 ; Jamali F2 ; Tafakhori A5 ; Jen JC4, 6, 7 ; Paisanruiz C4, 8, 9, 10, 11
Authors

Source: Neurology: Genetics Published:2019


Abstract

Recently, homozygous PUS7 mutations causing premature stop and truncation of the gene product were identified in 3 independent consanguineous families presenting with intellectual disability (ID), speech delay, short stature, microcephaly, and aggressive behavior.1 PUS7 encodes for a pseudouridine synthase 7 that catalyzes the isomerization of RNA uridine to RNA pseudouridine (Psi), which is the most abundant modified nucleotide found in all cellular RNAs and which may function as an RNA chaperone. The encoded protein contains a pseudouridine synthase domain of the TruD family that modifies uracil-13 in tRNA. Two homozygous mutations c.89-90del (p.Thr30Lysfs20) and c.1348C>T (p.Arg450) resulted in nonsense-mediated mRNA decay, meaning that mRNA transcripts containing the premature stop codons were eliminated through surveillance mechanisms, while the third mutation, consisting of a homozygous deletion encompassing the penultimate exon 15, escaped the nonsense-mediated mRNA decay to encode a mutant protein missing the C terminus including the TruD catalytic domain. All identified PUS7 variants resulted in aberrant pseudouridylation of at least 10 cytosolic tRNAs at position 13.1 © American Academy of Neurology.