Elsevier

Genetics in Medicine

Volume 21, Issue 4, April 2019, Pages 1021-1026
Genetics in Medicine

Brief Communication
De novo missense variants in RAC3 cause a novel neurodevelopmental syndrome

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41436-018-0323-y
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ABSTRACT

Purpose

RAC3 is an underexamined member of the Rho GTPase gene family that is expressed in the developing brain and linked to key cellular functions. De novo missense variants in the homolog RAC1 were recently associated with developmental disorders. In the RAC subfamily, transforming missense changes at certain shared residues have been observed in human cancers and previously characterized in experimental studies. The purpose of this study was to determine whether constitutional dysregulation of RAC3 is associated with human disease.

Methods

We discovered a RAC3 variant in the index case using genome sequencing, and searched for additional variants using international data-sharing initiatives. Functional effects of the variants were assessed using a multifaceted approach generalizable to most clinical laboratory settings.

Results

We rapidly identified five individuals with de novo monoallelic missense variants in RAC3, including one recurrent change. Every participant had severe intellectual disability and brain malformations. In silico protein modeling, and prior in vivo and in situ experiments, supported a transforming effect for each of the three different RAC3 variants. All variants were observed in databases of somatic variation in cancer.

Conclusions

Missense variants in RAC3 cause a novel brain disorder, likely through a mechanism of constitutive protein activation.

Keywords

exome
genome
neurodevelopment
Rho signaling
GTPase

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