Various haploinsufficiency mechanisms in Pitt-Hopkins syndrome.

2020 
Abstract Pitt-Hopkins syndrome is a rare neurodevelopment disorder caused by haploinsufficiency of the transcription factor 4 (TCF4). The main clinical symptoms of Pitt-Hopkins syndrome are severe development delay, intellectual disability, characteristic facial phenotype and breathing abnormalities, including episodic hyperventilation. Different pathogenic variants can lead to Pitt-Hopkins syndrome. The most common are large deletions at 18q21 encompassing the TCF4 gene and frameshifting/nonsense single nucleotide variants. However, variants in noncoding regions can also lead to Pitt-Hopkins syndrome by disrupting the normal pre-mRNA splicing machinery. Here we describe three patients with Pitt-Hopkins syndrome caused by a large deletion in chromosome 18, a nonsense variant and a novel variant located in intron 11 of TCF4 c.922+5G>A . Using RT-PCR analysis and minigene splicing assay we showed that this intronic variant leads to exon 11 skipping resulting in a formation of a premature stop-codon. To our knowledge, this is the first functional annotation of a splicing variant in Pitt-Hopkins syndrome.
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