Mutations in two large pedigrees highlight the role of ZNF711 in X-linked intellectual disability

IM van der Werf, A Van Dijck, E Reyniers… - Gene, 2017 - Elsevier
IM van der Werf, A Van Dijck, E Reyniers, C Helsmoortel, AA Kumar, VM Kalscheuer
Gene, 2017Elsevier
Intellectual disability (ID) affects approximately 1–2% of the general population and is
characterized by impaired cognitive abilities. ID is both clinically as well as genetically
heterogeneous, up to 2000 genes are estimated to be involved in the emergence of the
disease with various clinical presentations. For many genes, only a few patients have been
reported and causality of some genes has been questioned upon the discovery of apparent
loss-of-function mutations in healthy controls. Description of additional patients strengthens …
Abstract
Intellectual disability (ID) affects approximately 1–2% of the general population and is characterized by impaired cognitive abilities. ID is both clinically as well as genetically heterogeneous, up to 2000 genes are estimated to be involved in the emergence of the disease with various clinical presentations. For many genes, only a few patients have been reported and causality of some genes has been questioned upon the discovery of apparent loss-of-function mutations in healthy controls. Description of additional patients strengthens the evidence for the involvement of a gene in the disease and can clarify the clinical phenotype associated with mutations in a particular gene.
Here, we present two large four-generation families with a total of 11 males affected with ID caused by mutations in ZNF711, thereby expanding the total number of families with ID and a ZNF711 mutation to four. Patients with mutations in ZNF711 all present with mild to moderate ID and poor speech accompanied by additional features in some patients, including autistic features and mild facial dysmorphisms, suggesting that ZNF711 mutations cause non-syndromic ID.
Elsevier