Heterozygous loss-of-function SMC3 variants are associated with variable growth and developmental features.

Journal: HGG Advances
Published:
Abstract

Heterozygous missense variants and in-frame indels in SMC3 are a cause of Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS), marked by intellectual disability, growth deficiency, and dysmorphism, via an apparent dominant-negative mechanism. However, the spectrum of manifestations associated with SMC3 loss-of-function variants has not been reported, leading to hypotheses of alternative phenotypes or even developmental lethality. We used matchmaking servers, patient registries, and other resources to identify individuals with heterozygous, predicted loss-of-function (pLoF) variants in SMC3, and analyzed population databases to characterize mutational intolerance in this gene. Here, we show that SMC3 behaves as an archetypal haploinsufficient gene: it is highly constrained against pLoF variants, strongly depleted for missense variants, and pLoF variants are associated with a range of developmental phenotypes. Among 14 individuals with SMC3 pLoF variants, phenotypes were variable but coalesced on low growth parameters, developmental delay/intellectual disability, and dysmorphism, reminiscent of atypical CdLS. Comparisons to individuals with SMC3 missense/in-frame indel variants demonstrated an overall milder presentation in pLoF carriers. Furthermore, several individuals harboring pLoF variants in SMC3 were nonpenetrant for growth, developmental, and/or dysmorphic features, and some had alternative symptomatologies with rational biological links to SMC3. Analyses of tumor and model system transcriptomic data and epigenetic data in a subset of cases suggest that SMC3 pLoF variants reduce SMC3 expression but do not strongly support clustering with functional genomic signatures of typical CdLS. Our finding of substantial population-scale LoF intolerance in concert with variable growth and developmental features in subjects with SMC3 pLoF variants expands the scope of cohesinopathies, informs on their allelic architecture, and suggests the existence of additional clearly LoF-constrained genes whose disease links will be confirmed only by multilayered genomic data paired with careful phenotyping.

Authors
Morad Ansari, Kamli N Faour, Akiko Shimamura, Graeme Grimes, Emeline Kao, Erica Denhoff, Ana Blatnik, Daniel Ben Isvy, Lily Wang, Benjamin Helm, Helen Firth, Amy Breman, Emilia Bijlsma, Aiko Iwata Otsubo, Thomy J De Ravel, Vincent Fusaro, Alan Fryer, Keith Nykamp, Lara Stühn, Tobias Haack, G Korenke, Panayiotis Constantinou, Kinga Bujakowska, Karen Low, Emily Place, Jennifer Humberson, Melanie Napier, Jessica Hoffman, Jane Juusola, Matthew Deardorff, Wanqing Shao, Shira Rockowitz, Ian Krantz, Maninder Kaur, Sarah Raible, Victoria Dortenzio, Sabine Kliesch, Moriel Singer Berk, Emily Groopman, Stephanie Ditroia, Sonia Ballal, Siddharth Srivastava, Kathrin Rothfelder, Saskia Biskup, Jessica Rzasa, Jennifer Kerkhof, Haley Mcconkey, Bekim Sadikovic, Sarah Hilton, Siddharth Banka, Frank Tüttelmann, Donald Conrad, Anne O'donnell Luria, Michael Talkowski, David Fitzpatrick, Philip Boone
Relevant Conditions

Cornelia De Lange Syndrome