Publication: FBXO22 deficiency defines a pleiotropic syndrome of growth restriction and multi-system anomalies associated with a unique epigenetic signature
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KU Authors
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Ramakrishna, Navin B.
Sahari, Umar Bin Mohamad
Johmura, Yoshikazu
Ali, Nur Ain
Alghamdi, Malak
Bauer, Peter
Khan, Suliman
Ordonez, Natalia
Ferreira, Mariana
Basto, Jorge Pinto
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Abstract
FBXO22 encodes an F-box protein, which acts as a substrate-recognition component of the SKP1-CUL1-F-box (SCF) E3 ubiquitin ligase complex. Despite its known roles in the post-translational ubiquitination and degradation of specific substrates, including histone demethylases, the impact of FBXO22 on human development remains unknown. Here, we characterize a pleiotropic syndrome with prominent prenatal onset growth restriction and notable neurodevelopmental delay across 16 cases from 14 families. Through exome and genome sequencing, we identify four distinct homozygous FBXO22 variants with loss-of-function effects segregating with the disease: three predicted to lead to premature translation termination due to frameshift effects and a single-amino-acid-deletion variant, which, we show, impacts protein stability in vitro. We confirm that affected primary fibroblasts with a frameshift mutation are bereft of endogenous FBXO22 and show increased levels of the known substrate histone H3K9 demethylase KDM4B. Accordingly, we delineate a unique epigenetic signature for this disease in peripheral blood via long-read sequencing. Altogether, we identify and demonstrate that FBXO22 deficiency leads to a pleiotropic syndrome in humans, encompassing growth restriction and neurodevelopmental delay, the pathogenesis of which may be explained by broad chromatin alterations. © 2025 American Society of Human Genetics
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Publisher
Cell Press
Subject
Genetics
Citation
Has Part
Source
American Journal of Human Genetics
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DOI
10.1016/j.ajhg.2025.03.013
