Severe childhood speech disorder: Gene discovery highlights transcriptional dysregulation
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Jackson, Victoria E
Scerri, Thomas S
Van Reyk, Olivia
Coleman, Matthew
Braden, Ruth O
Turner, Samantha
Rigbye, Kristin A
Boys, Amber
Barton, Sarah
Webster, Richard
Fahey, Michael
Coman, David
Reilly, Sheena
et al.
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Abstract
© 2020 American Academy of Neurology. OBJECTIVE: Determining the genetic basis of speech disorders provides insight into the neurobiology of human communication. Despite intensive investigation over the past 2 decades, the etiology of most speech disorders in children remains unexplained. To test the hypothesis that speech disorders have a genetic etiology, we performed genetic analysis of children with severe speech disorder, specifically childhood apraxia of speech (CAS). METHODS: Precise phenotyping together with research genome or exome analysis were performed on children referred with a primary diagnosis of CAS. Gene coexpression and gene set enrichment analyses were conducted on high-confidence gene candidates. RESULTS: Thirty-four probands ascertained for CAS were studied. In 11/34 (32%) probands, we identified highly plausible pathogenic single nucleotide (n = 10; CDK13, EBF3, GNAO1, GNB1, DDX3X, MEIS2, POGZ, SETBP1, UPF2, ZNF142) or copy number (n = 1; 5q14.3q21.1 locus) variants in novel genes or loci for CAS. Testing of parental DNA was available for 9 probands and confirmed that the variants had arisen de novo. Eight genes encode proteins critical for regulation of gene transcription, and analyses of transcriptomic data found CAS-implicated genes were highly coexpressed in the developing human brain. CONCLUSION: We identify the likely genetic etiology in 11 patients with CAS and implicate 9 genes for the first time. We find that CAS is often a sporadic monogenic disorder, and highly genetically heterogeneous. Highly penetrant variants implicate shared pathways in broad transcriptional regulation, highlighting the key role of transcriptional regulation in normal speech development. CAS is a distinctive, socially debilitating clinical disorder, and understanding its molecular basis is the first step towards identifying precision medicine approaches.
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Neurology
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94
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20
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Clinical sciences
Neurosciences
Cognitive and computational psychology
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Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Clinical Neurology
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Neurology
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Hildebrand, MS; Jackson, VE; Scerri, TS; Van Reyk, O; Coleman, M; Braden, RO; Turner, S; Rigbye, KA; Boys, A; Barton, S; Webster, R; Fahey, M; Coman, D; Reilly, S; et al.; Bahlo, M; Morgan, AT, Severe childhood speech disorder: Gene discovery highlights transcriptional dysregulation, Neurology, 2020, 94 (20), pp. E2148-E2167