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The contribution of de novo coding mutations to meningomyelocele

Authors
 Yoo-Jin Jiny Ha  ;  Ashna Nisal  ;  Isaac Tang  ;  Chanjae Lee  ;  Ishani Jhamb  ;  Cassidy Wallace  ;  Robyn Howarth  ;  Sarah Schroeder  ;  Keng Ioi Vong  ;  Naomi Meave  ;  Fiza Jiwani  ;  Chelsea Barrows  ;  Sangmoon Lee  ;  Nan Jiang  ;  Arzoo Patel  ;  Krisha Bagga  ;  Niyati Banka  ;  Liana Friedman  ;  Francisco A Blanco  ;  Seyoung Yu  ;  Soeun Rhee  ;  Hui Su Jeong  ;  Isaac Plutzer  ;  Michael B Major  ;  Béatrice Benoit  ;  Christian Poüs  ;  Caleb Heffner  ;  Zoha Kibar  ;  Gyang Markus Bot  ;  Hope Northrup  ;  Kit Sing Au  ;  Madison Strain  ;  Allison E Ashley-Koch  ;  Richard H Finnell  ;  Joan T Le  ;  Hal S Meltzer  ;  Camila Araujo  ;  Helio R Machado  ;  Roger E Stevenson  ;  Anna Yurrita  ;  Sara Mumtaz  ;  Awais Ahmed  ;  Mulazim Hussain Khara  ;  Osvaldo M Mutchinick  ;  José Ramón Medina-Bereciartu  ;  Friedhelm Hildebrandt  ;  Gia Melikishvili  ;  Ahmed I Marwan  ;  Valeria Capra  ;  Mahmoud M Noureldeen  ;  Aida M S Salem  ;  Mahmoud Y Issa  ;  Maha S Zaki  ;  Libin Xu  ;  Ji Eun Lee  ;  Donghyuk Shin  ;  Anna Alkelai  ;  Alan R Shuldiner  ;  Stephen F Kingsmore  ;  Stephen A Murray  ;  Heon Yung Gee  ;  W Todd Miller  ;  Kimberley F Tolias  ;  John B Wallingford  ;  Spina Bifida Sequencing Consortium  ;  Sangwoo Kim  ;  Joseph G Gleeson 
Citation
 NATURE, Vol.641(8062) : 419-426, 2025-05 
Journal Title
NATURE
ISSN
 0028-0836 
Issue Date
2025-05
MeSH
Animals ; Cohort Studies ; Female ; Genetic Predisposition to Disease* / genetics ; Humans ; Male ; Meningomyelocele* / genetics ; Microtubules / metabolism ; Mutation* / genetics ; Mutation, Missense / genetics ; Netrin-1 / metabolism ; Signal Transduction / genetics ; Xenopus laevis / embryology ; Xenopus laevis / genetics
Abstract
Meningomyelocele (also known as spina bifida) is considered to be a genetically complex disease resulting from a failure of the neural tube to close. Individuals with meningomyelocele display neuromotor disability and frequent hydrocephalus, requiring ventricular shunting. A few genes have been proposed to contribute to disease susceptibility, but beyond that it remains unexplained1. We postulated that de novo mutations under purifying selection contribute to the risk of developing meningomyelocele2. Here we recruited a cohort of 851 meningomyelocele trios who required shunting at birth and 732 control trios, and found that de novo likely gene disruption or damaging missense mutations occurred in approximately 22.3% of subjects, with 28% of such variants estimated to contribute to disease risk. The 187 genes with damaging de novo mutations collectively define networks including actin cytoskeleton and microtubule-based processes, Netrin-1 signalling and chromatin-modifying enzymes. Gene validation demonstrated partial or complete loss of function, impaired signalling and defective closure of the neural tube in Xenopus embryos. Our results indicate that de novo mutations make key contributions to meningomyelocele risk, and highlight critical pathways required for neural tube closure in human embryogenesis.
Full Text
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-08676-x
DOI
10.1038/s41586-025-08676-x
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Biomedical Systems Informatics (의생명시스템정보학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Kim, Sangwoo(김상우) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5356-0827
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/206581
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