Heterozygous CELF4 variants in the N-term region crucial for the RNA-binding activity, leads to neurodevelopmental disorder and obesity.

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

RNA-binding proteins play a key role in post-transcriptional events, such as mRNA splicing, transport, stability, translation and decay. Dysregulation of RNA life can have dramatic consequences. CELF RNA-binding proteins appear to be essential during embryo development. In this study, we identified fifteen patients with heterozygous missense or loss-of-function variants in the CELF4 gene by exome or genome sequencing. All variants affecting the N-terminus of the protein are essential and sufficient for the RNA-binding and splicing activity or RRM domains. Most patients presented with neurodevelopmental disorders including global developmental delay/intellectual disability (11/14), seizures (9/15), and overweight/obesity (10/14) that began in childhood. Clinical features are similar to the reported celf4-mouse mutant phenotype. This study highlights the essential role of CELF4 in development and its involvement as a novel etiology of neurodevelopmental disorders with obesity.

Article activity feed