[PDF][PDF] Bi-allelic mutations in FAM149B1 cause abnormal primary cilium and a range of ciliopathy phenotypes in humans

R Shaheen, N Jiang, F Alzahrani, N Ewida… - The American Journal of …, 2019 - cell.com
R Shaheen, N Jiang, F Alzahrani, N Ewida, T Al-Sheddi, E Alobeid, D Musaev, V Stanley…
The American Journal of Human Genetics, 2019cell.com
Ciliopathies are clinical disorders of the primary cilium with widely recognized phenotypic
and genetic heterogeneity. In two Arab consanguineous families, we mapped a ciliopathy
phenotype that most closely matches Joubert syndrome (hypotonia, developmental delay,
typical facies, oculomotor apraxia, polydactyly, and subtle posterior fossa abnormalities) to a
single locus in which a founder homozygous truncating variant in FAM149B1 was identified
by exome sequencing. We subsequently identified a third Arab consanguineous multiplex …
Ciliopathies are clinical disorders of the primary cilium with widely recognized phenotypic and genetic heterogeneity. In two Arab consanguineous families, we mapped a ciliopathy phenotype that most closely matches Joubert syndrome (hypotonia, developmental delay, typical facies, oculomotor apraxia, polydactyly, and subtle posterior fossa abnormalities) to a single locus in which a founder homozygous truncating variant in FAM149B1 was identified by exome sequencing. We subsequently identified a third Arab consanguineous multiplex family in which the phenotype of Joubert syndrome/oral-facial-digital syndrome (OFD VI) was found to co-segregate with the same founder variant in FAM149B1. Independently, autozygosity mapping and exome sequencing in a consanguineous Turkish family with Joubert syndrome highlighted a different homozygous truncating variant in the same gene. FAM149B1 encodes a protein of unknown function. Mutant fibroblasts were found to have normal ciliogenesis potential. However, distinct cilia-related abnormalities were observed in these cells: abnormal accumulation IFT complex at the distal tips of the cilia, which assumed bulbous appearance, increased length of the primary cilium, and dysregulated SHH signaling. We conclude that FAM149B1 is required for normal ciliary biology and that its deficiency results in a range of ciliopathy phenotypes in humans along the spectrum of Joubert syndrome.
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