Novel IQCE variations confirm its role in postaxial polydactyly and cause ciliary defect phenotype in zebrafish.

Fiche publication


Date publication

septembre 2019

Journal

Human mutation

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Dr POCH Olivier


Tous les auteurs :
Estrada-Cuzcano A, Etard C, Delvallée C, Stoetzel C, Schaefer E, Scheidecker S, Geoffroy V, Schneider A, Studer F, Mattioli F, Chennen K, Sigaudy S, Plassard D, Poch O, Piton A, Strahle U, Muller J, Dollfus H

Résumé

Polydactyly is one of the most frequent inherited defects of the limbs characterized by supernumerary digits and high genetic heterogeneity. Among the many genes involved, either in isolated or syndromic forms, 8 have been implicated in postaxial polydactyly (PAP). Among those IQCE has been recently identified in a single consanguineous family. Using whole-exome sequencing in patients with uncharacterized ciliopathies including PAP, we identified 3 families with biallelic pathogenic variations in IQCE. Interestingly, the c.895_904del (p.Val301Serfs*8) was found in all families without sharing a common haplotype, suggesting a recurrent mechanism. Moreover, in 2 families, the systemic phenotype could be explained by additional pathogenic variants in known genes (TULP1, ATP6V1B1). RNA expression analysis on patients' fibroblasts confirms that dysfunction of IQCE leads to dysregulation of genes associated with the hedgehog-signaling pathway and zebrafish experiments demonstrate a full spectrum of phenotypes linked to defective cilia: body curvature, kidney cysts, left right asymmetry, misdirected cilia in pronephric duct and retinal defects. In conclusion, we identified 3 additional families confirming IQCE as a non-syndromic PAP gene. Our data emphasize, the importance of taking into account the complete set of variations of each individual as each clinical presentation could finally be explained by multiple genes. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Mots clés

IQCE, RNA-seq, cilia, hedgehog signaling, polydactyly, zebrafish

Référence

Hum. Mutat.. 2019 Sep 24;: