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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Etiology of craniofacial and cardiac malformations in a mouse model of-related syndromes.

Journal:
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Year:
2024
Authors:
Kumar, Shruti et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Human Genetics · Canada

Abstract

Pathogenic variants in SF3B4, a component of the U2 snRNP complex important for branchpoint sequence recognition and splicing, are responsible for the acrofacial disorders Nager and Rodriguez Syndrome, also known as-related syndromes. Patients exhibit malformations in the head, face, limbs, vertebrae as well as the heart. To uncover the etiology of craniofacial malformations found in-related syndromes, mutant mouse lines with homozygous deletion ofin neural crest cells (NCC) were generated. Like in human patients, these embryos had craniofacial and cardiac malformations with variable expressivity and penetrance. The severity and survival ofNCC mutants was modified by the level ofin neighboring non-NCC. RNA sequencing analysis of heads of embryos prior to morphological abnormalities revealed significant changes in expression of genes forming the NCC regulatory network, as well as an increase in exon skipping. Additionally, several key histone modifiers involved in craniofacial and cardiac development showed increased exon skipping. Increased exon skipping was also associated with use of a more proximal branch point, as well as an enrichment in thymidine bases in the 50 bp around the branch points. We propose that decrease incauses changes in the expression and splicing of transcripts required for proper craniofacial and cardiac development, leading to abnormalities.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39292749/