Authors
S Riazuddin, M Hussain, A Razzaq, Z Iqbal, M Shahzad, DL Polla, Y Song, E Van Beusekom, AA Khan, L Tomas-Roca, M Rashid, MY Zahoor, WM Wissink-Lindhout, MAR Basra, M Ansar, Z Agha, K Van Heeswijk, F Rasheed, M Van de Vorst, JA Veltman, C Gilissen, J Akram, T Kleefstra, MZ Assir, D Grozeva, K Carss, FL Raymond, TD O'Connor, SA Riazuddin, SN Khan, ZM Ahmed, APM de Brouwer, H van Bokhoven
Publication date
2017/11
Journal
Molecular psychiatry
Volume
22
Issue
11
Pages
1604-1614
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Description
Intellectual disability (ID) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorder, affecting 1–3% of the general population. Although research into the genetic causes of ID has recently gained momentum, identification of pathogenic mutations that cause autosomal recessive ID (ARID) has lagged behind, predominantly due to non-availability of sizeable families. Here we present the results of exome sequencing in 121 large consanguineous Pakistani ID families. In 60 families, we identified homozygous or compound heterozygous DNA variants in a single gene, 30 affecting reported ID genes and 30 affecting novel candidate ID genes. Potential pathogenicity of these alleles was supported by co-segregation with the phenotype, low frequency in control populations and the application of stringent bioinformatics analyses. In another eight families segregation of multiple pathogenic variants was observed, affecting 19 …
Total citations
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