[HTML][HTML] Identification of a novel ARL13B variant in a Joubert syndrome-affected patient with retinal impairment and obesity

S Thomas, V Cantagrel, L Mariani, V Serre… - European Journal of …, 2015 - nature.com
S Thomas, V Cantagrel, L Mariani, V Serre, JE Lee, N Elkhartoufi, P De Lonlay, I Desguerre…
European Journal of Human Genetics, 2015nature.com
Joubert syndrome (JS) is a genetically heterogeneous autosomal recessive ciliopathy with
22 genes implicated to date, including a small, ciliary GTPase, ARL13B. ARL13B is required
for cilia formation in vertebrates. JS patients display multiple symptoms characterized by
ataxia due to the cerebellar vermis hypoplasia, and that can also include ocular
abnormalities, renal cysts, liver fibrosis or polydactyly. These symptoms are shared with
other ciliopathies, some of which display additional phenotypes, such as obesity. Here we …
Abstract
Joubert syndrome (JS) is a genetically heterogeneous autosomal recessive ciliopathy with 22 genes implicated to date, including a small, ciliary GTPase, ARL13B. ARL13B is required for cilia formation in vertebrates. JS patients display multiple symptoms characterized by ataxia due to the cerebellar vermis hypoplasia, and that can also include ocular abnormalities, renal cysts, liver fibrosis or polydactyly. These symptoms are shared with other ciliopathies, some of which display additional phenotypes, such as obesity. Here we identified a novel homozygous missense variant in ARL13B/JBTS8 in a JS patient who displayed retinal defects and obesity. We demonstrate the variant disrupts ARL13B function, as its expression did not rescue the mutant phenotype either in Arl13b scorpion zebrafish or in Arl13b hennin mouse embryonic fibroblasts, while the wild-type ARL13B did. Finally, we show that ARL13B is localized within the primary cilia of neonatal mouse hypothalamic neurons consistent with the known link between hypothalamic ciliary function and obesity. Thus our data identify a novel ARL13B variant that causes JS and retinopathy and suggest an extension of the phenotypic spectrum of ARL13B mutations to obesity.
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