Menke-Hennekam syndrome; delineation of domain-specific subtypes with distinct clinical and DNA methylation profiles
Sadegheh Haghshenas, Hidde J. Bout, Josephine Schijns, Michael A. Levy, Jennifer Kerkhof, Pratibha Bhai, Haley McConkey, Zandra A. Jenkins, Ella M. Williams, Benjamin J. Halliday, Sylvia Huisman, Peter Lauffer, Vivian de Waard, Laura Witteveen, Siddharth Banka, Angela F. Brady, Elena Galazzi, Julien Van‐Gils, Anna Hurst, Frank J. Kaiser, Didier Lacombe, Antonio Federico Martínez‐Monseny, Patricia Fergelot, Fabíola Paoli Monteiro, Ilaria Parenti, Luca Persani, Fernando Santos‐Simarro, Brittany Simpson, Andrea Angius, Janice Baker, Emma Bedoukian, Vikas Bhambhani, Olaf A. Bodamer, Alan O’Brien, Jill Clayton‐Smith, Laura Crisponi, Anna M. Cueto‐González, the DDD study, Koenraad Devriendt, Elena Garrido, Nadja Ehmke, Albertien M. van Eerde, Annette P.M. van den Elzen, Laurence Faivre, Laura J. Fisher, Josue Flores-Daboub, Alison Foster, Jennifer Friedman, Elisabeth Gabau, Elena Galazzi, Sixto García‐Miñaúr, Livia Garavelli, Thatjana Gardeitchik, Erica H. Gerkes, Julien Van‐Gils, Jacques C. Giltay, Aixa Gonzalez Garcia, Ketil Heimdal, Denise Horn, Gunnar Houge, Sophia B. Hufnagel, Denisa Ilenčíková, Sophie Julia, Sarina G. Kant, Esther Kinning, Eric W. Klee, Chelsea Kois, M. Kovacevic, A.M.A. Lachmeijer, Brendan C. Lanpher, Marine Lebrun, Eyby Leon, Angie Lichty, Ruth Lin, Isabel Llano‐Rivas, Sally Ann Lynch, Saskia M. Maas, Silvia Maitz, Shane McKee, Daniela Melis, Elisabetta Merati, Giuseppe Merla, Ruth Newbury‐Ecob, Mathilde Nizon, Soo-Mi Park, Jennifer Patterson, Florence Petit, Hilde Peeters, Luca Persani, Ivana Persico, Valentina Pes, Marzia Pollazzon, Thomas P. Potjer, Lorraine Potocki, Carrie Pottinger, Chitra Prasad, Eloise J. Prijoles, Nicola Ragge, Jan Peter Rake, Conny M.A. van Ravenswaaij‐Arts
Abstract
CREB-binding protein (CBP, encoded by CREBBP) and its paralog E1A-associated protein (p300, encoded by EP300) are involved in histone acetylation and transcriptional regulation. Variants that produce a null allele or disrupt the catalytic domain of either protein cause Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome (RSTS), while pathogenic missense and in-frame indel variants in parts of exons 30 and 31 cause phenotypes recently described as Menke-Hennekam syndrome (MKHK). To distinguish MKHK subtypes and define their characteristics, molecular and extended clinical data on 82 individuals (54 unpublished) with variants affecting CBP (n = 71) or p300 (n = 11) (NP_004371.2 residues 1,705-1,875 and NP_001420.2 residues 1,668-1,833, respectively) were summarized. Additionally, genome-wide DNA methylation profiles were assessed in DNA extracted from whole peripheral blood from 54 individuals. Most variants clustered closely around the zinc-binding residues of two zinc-finger domains (ZZ and TAZ2) and within the first α helix of the fourth intrinsically disordered linker (ID4) of CBP/p300. Domain-specific methylation profiles were discerned for the ZZ domain in CBP/p300 (found in nine out of 10 tested individuals) and TAZ2 domain in CBP (in 14 out of 20), while a domain-specific diagnostic episignature was refined for the ID4 domain in CBP/p300 (in 21 out of 21). Phenotypes including intellectual disability of varying degree and distinct physical features were defined for each of the regions. These findings demonstrate existence of at least three MKHK subtypes, which are domain specific (MKHK-ZZ, MKHK-TAZ2, and MKHK-ID4) rather than gene specific (CREBBP/EP300). DNA methylation episignatures enable stratification of molecular pathophysiologic entities within a gene or across a family of paralogous genes.