Alterations in CDH15 and KIRREL3 in patients with mild to severe intellectual disability.

Article Details

Citation

Bhalla K, Luo Y, Buchan T, Beachem MA, Guzauskas GF, Ladd S, Bratcher SJ, Schroer RJ, Balsamo J, DuPont BR, Lilien J, Srivastava AK

Alterations in CDH15 and KIRREL3 in patients with mild to severe intellectual disability.

Am J Hum Genet. 2008 Dec;83(6):703-13. doi: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2008.10.020. Epub 2008 Nov 13.

PubMed ID
19012874 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Cell-adhesion molecules play critical roles in brain development, as well as maintaining synaptic structure, function, and plasticity. Here we have found the disruption of two genes encoding putative cell-adhesion molecules, CDH15 (cadherin superfamily) and KIRREL3 (immunoglobulin superfamily), by a chromosomal translocation t(11;16) in a female patient with intellectual disability (ID). We screened coding regions of these two genes in a cohort of patients with ID and controls and identified four nonsynonymous CDH15 variants and three nonsynonymous KIRREL3 variants that appear rare and unique to ID. These variations altered highly conserved residues and were absent in more than 600 unrelated patients with ID and 800 control individuals. Furthermore, in vivo expression studies showed that three of the CDH15 variations adversely altered its ability to mediate cell-cell adhesion. We also show that in neuronal cells, human KIRREL3 colocalizes and interacts with the synaptic scaffolding protein, CASK, recently implicated in X-linked brain malformation and ID. Taken together, our data suggest that alterations in CDH15 and KIRREL3, either alone or in combination with other factors, could play a role in phenotypic expression of ID in some patients.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Peripheral plasma membrane protein CASKO14936Details