Molecular Genetic Pathogenesis
The genes in which mutation causes MCPH-SCKS spectrum disorders are involved in basic, intricate cell processes. Not surprisingly, loss of function of these genes results in overlapping phenotypes. The cell processes involved can include:
Control of DNA integrity (double-strand breaks)
Control of initiation of mitosis at cell cycle checkpoints 1 and 2
Control of the metaphase-anaphase checkpoint
Regulation of mitotic spindle organization and kinetics
Two distinct pathogenic mechanisms give rise to MCPH-SCKS spectrum disorders.
General growth failure. This quantitative effect is related to a general slowing of the cell cycle that reduces the total number of cell divisions during development. Physiologic compensation and redundancies probably explain why growth failure is inconstant, and when present varies and is
gene dependent.
Brain growth failure. An additional pathogenic mechanism explains the sensitivity of brain growth to alterations of mitotic dynamics. Normal brain volume critically depends on the number of mature neurons produced during neuronogenesis (before 20 weeks' gestation). The fate of neuronal progenitor cells is determined at each cell division by the orientation of the spindle pole relative to the ventricular wall: either (1) one mother neuronal progenitor divides into two daughter neuronal progenitors or (2) one mother progenitor divides into one daughter neuronal progenitor and one neuroblast, which subsequently migrates to the cortex. Subtle alteration of the dynamics of mitosis disrupts the delicate equilibrium between the two types of division, favoring premature differentiation and, consequently, premature depletion of the pool of neuronal progenitors.
For a detailed summary of gene and protein information for the genes listed below, see Table A, Gene.
MCPH1 (locus name MCPH1)
Gene structure.
MCPH1 (known previously as BRIT1) spans 236 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes three protein-encoding MCPH1 isoforms; isoform 1 (NM_024596.3) has 14 exons and encodes a protein of 835 amino acids (NP_078872.2).
Benign variants. Benign variants in MCPH1 do not correlate generally with brain size [Woods et al 2006], although in Chinese Han population, a normal variant was associated with variation in cranial size [Wang et al 2008].
Pathogenic variants
Missense and
nonsense variants and small and gross deletions have been reported; see
Table 5 (pdf).
See Table 5 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. Microcephalin has three breast cancer 1 C-terminal (BRCT) domains, which are common to many DNA repair proteins (e.g., BRCA1, BRCA2, MDC1, NBN). MCPH1 binds directly to the SWI-SNF chromatin remodeling complex and interacts with a number of proteins including histone H2AFX, phosphorylated CDC27, and pericentrin (involved in microcephalic osteodysplastic dwarfism, type II [MOPD2]).
The physiology of MCPH1 is complex. It has been implicated in various cellular processes including DNA damage checkpoint (ATM-and ATR-mediated DNA-damage response), control of intra-S and G2-M mitotic checkpoints, DNA repair, repression of the human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT), and transcription. Interaction of MCPH1 with condensin II may explain the premature chromatin condensation that occurs in microcephalin-deficient microcephalies.
Abnormal gene product. All but one pathogenic variant predicts the production of nonfunctional, truncated microcephalin. Considering the multiple facets of MCPH1, its deficiency causes a wide range of cellular defects in DNA-damage repair, centrosome and spindle organization, and cell-cycle progression.
Chromosome preparations of patients with MCPH1 exhibit an elevated fraction of prophase-like cells and show poor metaphase resolution. Increased frequency of spontaneous chromosome breakage, endomitosis, and hypersensitivity to clastogenic agents was reported in one case [Tommerup et al 1993, Farooq et al 2010].
WDR62 (MCPH2)
Gene structure.
WDR52 spans 51 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes two protein-encoding isoforms. The longest transcript (isoform 1 - NM_001083961.1) has 32 exons and encodes a protein of 1523 amino acids (NP_001077430.1).
Pathogenic variants. The majority of molecular details come from the three papers that simultaneously implicated WDR62 in microcephalies with or without brain malformation [Bilguvar et al 2010, Nicholas et al 2010, Yu et al 2010].
See Table 6 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. WDR62 contains several functional WD40 domains, a short (about 40 amino acid) motif involved in protein-protein interaction. WDR62 is a scaffold protein and is often observed in proteins known to serve as mediators for the assembly of protein complexes. It is both a centrosomal and a nuclear protein, like ASPM and MCPH1. Its localization varies with the cell cycle phase: during mitotic entry WDR62 accumulates at the spindle pole where it persists until metaphase-anaphase transition. In interphase, WDR62 predominantly localizes in the nucleus.
Abnormal gene product. In vitro studies done on transfected cells carrying a pathogenic WDR62 missense variant showed expression of the fusion protein in the cytoplasm but not at the spindle pole during mitosis [Nicholas et al 2010]. Impact on stress granules has not been assessed.
Experimental depletion of WDR62 by siRNA results in spindle orientation defects, decreased integrity of centrosomes which are displaced from the spindle pole, and delayed mitotic progression [Bogoyevitch et al 2012].
CDK5RAP2 (MCPH3)
Gene structure.
CDK5RAP2 (also known as CEP215: centrosome expressed protein 215 kd) spans 191 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes three protein-encoding isoforms. The longest transcript (isoform 1 - NM_018249.5) has 39 exons and encodes a protein of 1893 amino acids (NP_060719.4).
Pathogenic variants. Pathogenic variants were first reported in CDK5RAP2 in four Pakistani families with primary microcephaly [Bond et al 2005]. Other patients have been reported (see Table 7).
In one family the c.4186-15A>G variant was originally considered to result in the
insertion of a new splice acceptor site, leading to a subsequent frameshift and a premature stop codon [
Bond et al 2005]; it was later reassessed as p.Arg1334SerfsTer5 [
Park et al 2011].
See Table 7 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. CDK5RAP2 is a gamma-tubulin complex-binding protein, a centrosome component for pericentriolar matrix protein recruitment and association with CDK5 and CDK5R1. CDK5RAP2 contains a microtubule-associated domain and localizes to microtubule plus ends where it promotes microtubule polymerization. CDK5RAP2 is found in the Golgi apparatus, in the pericentriolar region (where it adheres to the surface of the centrosome) and in the region of the centrosomal appendages. It localizes to the mid-body during cytokinesis and is required for docking and stabilizing the γ-tubulin ring complex to the centrosome. CDK5RAP2 works as a negative regulator of centriole disengagement (thus enabling the spindle checkpoint) by maintaining (in cooperation with pericentrin) the cohesion between mother and daughter centrioles, which is responsible for MOPD2.
Abnormal gene product. Loss of CDK5RAP2 function causes an increased cell-cycle exit by promoting premature neuronal differentiation [Buchman et al 2010]. Inhibition of CDK5RAP2 expression causes chromosome missegregation by affecting the spindle checkpoint [Zhang et al 2009].
KNL1 (MCPH4/SCKL5)
Gene structure.
KNL1 (cancer susceptibility candidate 5, also often referred to as blinkin, Spc105, or AF15Q14) spans 70 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes two protein-encoding isoforms. The longest transcript (isoform 1 - NM_170589.4) has 27 exons and encodes a protein of 2342 amino acids (NP_733468.3).
Pathogenic variants. Three families from the same rural area of Morocco had a homozygous KNL1 missense variant which causes amino acid substitution p.Met2041Ile and is predicted to inactivate an exon splicing enhancer (ESE), leading to an abnormal transcript with absence of exon 18 [Jamieson et al 1999, Genin et al 2012].
See Table 8 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal protein product. CASC5 is a large protein containing several conserved motif repeats (S/GILK, RRVSF, and MELT).
CASC protein functions as a molecular scaffold to dock other proteins (notably BUB1 and BUB1B) to kinetochores at the equatorial plate. It has two major roles during mitosis: proper attachment of the kinetochores of chromosome centromeres to the microtubule apparatus and spindle-assembly checkpoint (SAC) signaling. It is weakly expressed in interphase nuclei. Expression increases from prophase to anaphase, and declines during the exit of mitosis.
Abnormal protein product. Although the pathogenic variant was shown in vitro to cause exon skipping, patient lymphoblasts showed no abnormalities in mitosis, no changes in growth rate, and no micronuclei. Expression was normal in patient fibroblasts, and mitotic spindles were normal [Genin et al 2012].
ASPM (MCPH5)
Gene structure.
ASPM (abnormal spindle homolog microcephaly associated) comprises 31 exons spanning 63 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes two protein-encoding isoforms. The longest transcript (isoform 1 - NM_018136.4) has 28 exons and encodes a protein of 3477 amino acids (NP_060606.3).
Pathogenic variants. In Pakistan and India mutation of ASPM accounts for one third to one half of MCPH. Pathogenic variants include a translocation, large and small deletions, insertions/duplications, and base substitutions (stop variants and mRNA splice sites) [Bond et al 2002, Bond et al 2003, Kumar et al 2004, Pichon et al 2004, Shen et al 2005, Gul et al 2006b, Gul et al 2007, Desir et al 2008, Muhammad et al 2009, Nicholas et al 2009, Passemard et al 2009, Saadi et al 2009, Darvish et al 2010, Kousar et al 2010, Mahmood et al 2011, Bacino et al 2012, Hussain et al 2013].
Even in consanguineous families, compound pathogenic variants have been reported [Saadi et al 2009]. Absence of correlation between variant type and predominance of truncating variants is consistent with the notion that the lack of the C-terminal domain of ASPM, which mediates midbody localization, may be sufficient to cause microcephaly [Paramasivam et al 2007].
Even in consanguineous families, compound heterozygosity of pathogenic variants has been reported [Saadi et al 2009]. Absence of a correlation between variant type and the predominance of truncating variants are consistent with the notion that the lack of the C-terminal domain of ASPM (which mediates localization to the midbody of the centrosome) may be sufficient to cause microcephaly [Paramasivam et al 2007].
Only one missense variant has been reported in ASPM (p.Gln3180Pro) [Gul et al 2006b]. This pathogenic variant has not been functionally tested to confirm its deleterious impact.
A balanced familial chromosome translocation t(1;4)(q31;p15.3) was reported in an infant with primary microcephaly [Pichon et al 2004]. The translocation breakpoint was situated within intron 17 of ASPM.
An apparently balanced familial chromosome translocation t(1;4)(q31;p15.3) – in which the translocation breakpoint was situated within intron 17 of ASPM - was reported in an infant with primary microcephaly [Pichon et al 2004].
See Table 9 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants until 2010.
Nicholas et al [2009] reported molecular findings in 99 consanguineous families with a strict diagnosis of MCPH (several patients were published previously). In this cohort 41% were homozygous at the MCPH5 locus; pathogenic variants were identified in all but two families. Eleven of 27 non-consanguineous families of predominantly northern European origin with a strict diagnosis of MCPH had biallelic ASPM pathogenic variants. Among patients with microcephaly and intellectual disability, with or without other neurologic features, only three (7%) had biallelic ASPM pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. ASPM contains a NH2-terminal microtubule-binding domain, two calponin homology domains (CH-domains) that are found in cytoskeletal and signal transduction proteins, and 81 IQ motifs (an extremely basic unit of ~23 amino acids, whose conserved core contains an isoleucine-glutamine [I-Q] pair). The IQ motif serves as a binding site for different proteins including the essential and regulatory myosin light chains, calmodulin, and calmodulin-like proteins. IQ motifs are protein kinase C (PKC) phosphorylation sites. Protein isoforms, derived from splice variants of ASPM, contain different numbers of IQ domains.
ASPM localizes to centrosomes and is recruited in a microtubule-dependent manner to the pericentriolar matrix (PCM) at the spindle poles during mitosis, where it binds to the microtubule minus end. It colocalizes with the centrosomal marker γ-tubulin. It is concentrated at the midbody ring during cytokinesis [Higgins et al 2010, Singhmar & Kumar 2011]. ASPM interacts with CIT (citron kinase) and with UBE3A (ubiquitin protein ligase E3A), the protein whose haploinsufficiency causes Angelman syndrome.
Abnormal gene product. One pathogenic missense variant has been reported in a Pakistani family with consanguinity. The remaining described pathogenic variants predict the production of a truncated protein, as at least some mutant ASPM transcripts escape nonsense-mediated decay [Kouprina et al 2005]. Truncated proteins are thought to be expressed in the cytosol and thus may have residual activity. However, no correlation was observed between the size of the truncated protein and OFC, IQ, or gyral pattern, even with very C-terminal variants [Bond et al 2003, Higgins et al 2010]. These results do not support the presence of residual activity for such truncated proteins, although the mechanism which prevents truncated ASPM from exerting any biologic function is unknown (e.g., early protein decay, intracellular mistargeting).
In mice, truncating Aspm homozygous pathogenic variants cause mild microcephaly. These mice show severe reduction in the size of testes and ovaries accompanied by reduced fertility, secondary to a massive loss of germ cells [Pulvers et al 2010]. Ovarian dysfunction has not been addressed in humans.
CENPJ (MCPH6/SCKL4)
Gene structure.
CENPJ (centromere protein J) spans 86 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes one protein-encoding isoform. The transcript (NM_018451.4) has 18 exons and encodes a protein of 1138 amino acids (NP_060921.3).
Pathogenic variants. Loss-of-function variants were observed in several patients with the MCPH phenotype.
One homozygous transition in the last nucleotide of intron 11 (c.3302-1G>C) was reported in a consanguineous Saudi family with SCKL [Al-Dosari et al 2010]. This splice-junction variant leads to the generation of three different abnormal transcripts.
See Table 10 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. CENPJ (also known as CPAP) contains five CC4 coiled coil domains (a domain that binds tubulin dimers and is important for centriole elongation) and a C-terminal domain that interacts with CEP152. It forms a ternary complex with SASS6 and CEP350.
CENPJ is present in the cytoplasm of proliferating cells. During centriole biogenesis, it is concentrated within the proximal lumen of both parental centrioles and procentrioles, and in the pericentriolar matrix.
CENPJ and Polo-like kinase PLK4 are recruited to the centrosome by CEP152 [Cizmecioglu et al 2010]. CENPJ is associated with the γ-tubulin ring complex. CENPJ forms a homodimer [Zhao et al 2010]. CENPJ phosphorylation by PLK2 and PLK4 increases at the G1/S transition phase and decreases during the exit of mitosis. Phosphorylated CENPJ is preferentially located at the procentriole [Chang et al 2010]. CENPJ is involved in microtubule disassembly at the centrosome [Basto et al 2006].
Abnormal gene product. Pathogenic variants are thought to lead to the production of nonfunctional CENPJ proteins.
STIL (MCPH7)
Gene structure.
STIL (SCL/TAL1 interrupting locus) spans 98 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes two protein-encoding isoforms. The longest transcript (isoform 1 - NM_001048166.1) has 17 exons and encodes a protein of 1288 amino acids (NP_001041631.1). The second transcript variant (NM_003035.2) uses an alternate in-frame splice site in the 3' coding region, resulting in an isoform that is one amino acid residue shorter.
Pathogenic variants.
STIL homozygous loss-of-function variants were described in four of 24 consanguineous Indian families unlinked to known MCPH loci [Kumar et al 2009].
See Table 11 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. STIL is expressed in human brain as early as 16 weeks [Kumar et al 2009]. It has a 90 amino-acid-long C-terminal domain (STAN or STIL/Ana2 motif).
STIL is a cytoplasmic protein that localizes to the pericentriolar region surrounding parental centrioles. It is implicated in regulation of the mitotic spindle checkpoint by increasing phosphorylation of CDK1, a regulatory pathway that monitors chromosome segregation during cell division to ensure the proper distribution of chromosomes to daughter cells. STIL is recruited by PLK4 and is necessary for SAS6 recruitment to centrioles. It interacts with the centromere proteins CENPJ and SAS4 [Tang et al 2011]. STIL is phosphorylated in mitosis and in response to activation of the spindle checkpoint, and disappears when cells transition to the G1 phase [Arquint et al 2012].
CEP135 (MCPH8)
Gene structure.
CEP135 (centrosomal protein 135 kd) spans 107 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes one protein-encoding isoform. The transcript (NM_025009.4) has 26 exons and encodes a protein of 1140 amino acids (NP_079285.2).
Pathogenic variants. A pathogenic variant of CEP135 was found in a single family with severe microcephaly (-12 to 14.5 SD) from northern Pakistan [Hussain et al 2012].
See Table 12 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. CEP135 is an α-helical protein located throughout the cell cycle in the pericentriolar matrix, around the centriolar surface, and within the proximal lumen of both parental and nascent centrioles where it is associated with CENPJ. CEP135, a scaffolding protein during early centriole biogenesis, is required for centriole-centriole cohesion during interphase. It interacts with C-NAP1 and CEP250 during interphase [Kim et al 2008], and with the 50-kd subunit of the dynactin complex (p50) which is involved in anchoring microtubules to centrosomes [Uetake et al 2004].
Abnormal gene product. In fibroblasts from an affected individual, 22% of cells had no centrosome (identified by γ-tubulin staining) and 18% of cells had three to five centrosomes, which sometimes appeared fragmented. Many nuclei were misshapen and fragmented, and the tubulin network was disorganized [Hussain et al 2012].
CEP152 (MCPH9)
Gene structure.
CEP152 (centrosome protein 152 kd) spans 98 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes two protein-encoding isoforms. The longest transcript (isoform 1 - NM_001194998.1) has 27 exons and encodes a protein of 1710 amino acids (NP_001181927.1).
Pathogenic variants. Pathogenic variants in seven families with SCKS have been reported [Kalay et al 2011]. A recurrent c.261+1G>C pathogenic variant was present in several unrelated individuals of Turkish origin. Two pathogenic variants in cis configuration were observed in one Pakistani family [Hussain et al 2013]. Pathogenic variants in CEP152 wer reported in persons with MCPH from a Canadian Maritime population [Guernsey et al 2010].
See Table 13 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. CEP152, the human orthololog of the Drosophila Asterless gene, contains two structural maintenance of chromosomes (SMC)-like coiled-coil domains and a centrosome-localization domain. It is localized in the periphery of centrioles. CEP152 scaffolds procentriole formation by promoting centrosomal accumulation of CENPJ and PLK4. It is recruited by CEP63 to form a ring at the proximal end of parental centrioles and is required for centriole duplication.
Abnormal gene product. Interphase cells from tissues of affected individuals show a variety of morphologic abnormalities: multinucleated cells, centrosomes without astral microtubules (microtubules that only exist immediately before and during mitosis), unseparated centrosomes without asters (microtubules that radiate from a centrosome during mitosis), fragmented centrosomes, and micronuclei. At metaphase, chromosomes are incorrectly aligned on the metaphase plate; the following are observed: a monopolar and a tripolar spindle with structurally abnormal centrosomes, an excess of early anaphasic cells, and defects in cytokinesis. Mitotic segregation errors led to variable aneuploidies in 10% of cells in one affected individual [Kalay et al 2011]. Impaired CEP152 function leads to accumulation of genomic defects resulting from replicative stress through enhanced activation of ATM signaling, leading to delays in S-phase entry and to G2/M progression.
PHC1 (MCPH11)
Gene structure.
PHC1 (polyhomeotic-like protein 1) spans 28 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes one protein-encoding isoform. The transcript (NM_004426.2) has 15 exons and encodes a protein of 1004 amino acids.
Pathogenic variants. A missense variant (p.Leu992Phe) was reported in a consanguineous Saudi family [Awad et al 2013]. Head circumferences were -4.3 and -5.8 SD below the mean; heights were -3.6 SD and 2.3 SD below the mean.
See Table 14 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. Polycomb repressive complexes (PRC) 1 and 2 are protein complexes that function as transcriptional repressors that silence many genes throughout development via chromatin remodeling and histone modification. PHC1, a component of the PRC1 complex, acts as an E3 ubiquitin ligase and is implicated in H2A and geminin ubiquitination. PHC1 is also involved in DNA repair as it is recruited to chromatin regions in response to DNA damage [Awad et al 2013].
Abnormal gene product. The pathogenic variant observed by Awad et al [2013] led to increased proteasome-mediated degradation of the mutated PHC1 protein and a concomitant increased geminin expression. In patient cells, the authors showed defects in cellular proliferation, cell cycle, and DNA repair.
CDK6 (MCPH12)
Gene structure.
NCBI Gene recognizes two protein-encoding transcript variants. The transcript NM_001259.6 has seven exons and encodes a protein of 326 amino acids (NP_001250.1)
Pathogenic variants. The p.Ala197Thr variant was observed in ten individuals from a consanguineous Punjabi family [Hussain et al 2013].
See Table 15 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. CDK6, a member of the cyclin-dependent protein kinase (CDK) family, is a catalytic subunit of a protein kinase complex that is important for cell cycle G1 phase progression and G1/S transition. CDK6 is present in the cytoplasm and nucleus of non-dividing cells, notably in the edges and in cytoplasmic extensions of astrocytes where it partially colocalizes with actin. During mitosis, from prophase to telophase, CDK6 accumulates at the centrosome and surrounds pericentrin [Hussain et al 2013].
Abnormal gene product. Mutant CDK6 does not accumulate at centrosomes [Hussain et al 2013].
ATR (SCKL1)
Gene structure.
ATR (ataxia-telangiectasia and rad3 related) spans 130 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes one protein-encoding isoform. The transcript (NM_001184.3) has 47 exons and encodes a protein of 2644 amino acids (NP_001175.2).
Pathogenic variants. A single homozygous pathogenic variant was reported in two consanguineous families of Pakistani origin [O'Driscoll et al 2003]. The variant did not change an amino acid, but resulted in use of two cryptic splice-donor sites in exon 9 resulting in both exon 9 skipping followed by a premature translation termination codon in exon 10. Affected individuals had typical SCKS with severe microcephaly (head circumference -12 SD, height -5 SD) [Goodship et al 2000]. Three other patients were reported [Ogi et al 2012, Mokrani-Benhelli et al 2013].
See Table 16 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal protein. ATR (ATM- and Rad3-related) kinase is a member of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)-like serine/threonine protein kinase (PIKK) family, a family that also includes ATM (ataxia telangiectasia mutated), the DNA-PK (DNA-dependent protein kinase, an enzyme involved in NHEJ), and mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin). ATR is a DNA damage sensor.
ATR forms a stable complex with ATRIP [Cortez et al 2001]. When DNA replication is impeded, extensive single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) is exposed through discordance between DNA polymerases and the MCM helicase, and then coated by replication protein A (RPA), which in turn recruits ATR through ATRIP binding.
Once activated, ATR phosphorylates and activates several downstream effector kinases (BRCA1, CHEK1, MCM2, RAD17, RPA2, SMC1, and TP53) which collectively inhibit DNA replication and mitosis, promote DNA repair, and phosphorylate histone H2AX at sites of DNA damage. Activated ATR and Chk1 coordinate DNA replication, DNA repair, and cell-cycle transitions. Action of ATR requires its interaction with the FANCD2 complex (one of the complexes formed by genes associated with Fanconi anemia) which it ubiquinates. ATR also forms a complex with CHD4 and HDAC2 and interacts with a number of proteins including BCR-ABL, CLSPN, CEP164, and TELO2.
Abnormal protein function. Mutation of ATR results in deficiency in ATR signaling and damage responses.
RBBP8 (SCKL2)
Gene structure.
RBBP8 (retinoblastoma binding protein 8; previously known as CTIP) spans 228 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes two protein-encoding isoforms but three transcripts (variants 1 and 2 both encode isoform a). The longest transcript (isoform a - NM_002894.2) has 20 exons and encodes a protein of 897 amino acids.
Pathogenic variants. Pathogenic variants in RBBP8 were identified for the first time in SCKS in 2011. The two RBBP8 pathogenic variants reported to date lead to a loss of function.
See Table 17 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. RBBP8 is a ubiquitously expressed nuclear endonuclease protein that cooperates with the MRE11-RAD50-NBN (MRN) complex in processing meiotic and mitotic double-strand breaks. It belongs to a complex with transcriptional co-repressor CTBP. RBBP8 has both transcription-dependent and transcription-independent roles in cell cycle progression, and plays a major role as a partner of ATR/ATRIP- functioning downstream of the MRN complex- to promote ATR activation and its recruitment to double-strand breaks in the S/G2 phase. RBBP8 forms a complex with BRCA1 that regulates CHEK1 activation and controls cell cycle G2/M checkpoints on DNA damage.
Abnormal gene product. In the absence of RBBP8, the processing of double-strand breaks (DBS) is impaired, ATR activation is reduced, and mutant cells do not respond optimally to DNA damage [Qvist et al 2011].
CEP63 (SCKL6)
Gene structure.
CEP63 (centrosomal protein 63 kd) spans 89 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes one protein-encoding isoform. The transcript (NM_025009.4) has 26 exons and encodes a protein of 1140 amino acids (NP_079285.2).
Pathogenic variants. A hypomorphic pathogenic variant was identified in three cousins from a consanguineous Pakistani family [Sir et al 2011].
See Table 18 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. The CEP63 protein contains six coiled-coil domains. CEP63 localizes to the centrosomes throughout the cell cycle, mediated by its N-terminus (amino acids 1 to 290). CEP63 interacts with CEP152 to form a ring at the proximal end of parental centrioles where parental centrioles and procentrioles are predicted to engage [Sir et al 2011]. CEP63 recruits CDK1, a key mitotic kinase, to the centrosome [Loffler et al 2011]. Following DNA damage, such as double-strand breaks, CEP63 is removed from centrosomes, inactivating the spindle assembly, and delaying mitotic progression.
Abnormal gene product. Lack of CEP63 delays procentriole assembly (explaining unipolar spindles) and impairs engagement of centrioles (explaining mis-segregation of duplicated centrioles in the same pole). Cells knocked out for CEP63 show spindle defects such as monopolar and multipolar spindles, and mitotic skipping leading to endopolyploidy (a polyploid state in which the chromosomes have divided repeatedly without subsequent division of the nucleus or cell) [Loffler et al 2011, Sir et al 2011].
NIN (SCKL7)
Gene structure.
NIN (ninein or GSK3B interacting protein) spans 111 kb. NCBI Gene recognizes four protein-encoding isoforms. The longest transcript (isoform 2 - NM_020921.3) has 32 exons and encodes a protein of 2133 amino acids (NP_065972.3). NIN has several isoforms which may differ largely from isoform 2. Isoform 5 has also been referred to as hNinein-Lm.
Pathogenic variants. Two native Mexican Indian sisters were reported with compound heterozygous pathogenic variants in NIN [Dauber et al 2012].
See Table 19 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. Ninein is a coiled-coil centrosomal protein important for centrosomal function. In interphase cells, ninein is localized in the centrosome. It forms oligomeric tubular structures. Ninein decreases in metaphase and anaphase and reappears in telophase. In the mother centrosome, ninein localizes at both ends of the centrosome tube, including the site of centrosome duplication, while in the daughter centrosome it is present only at the closed end. This protein is important for positioning and anchoring the microtubule minus-ends. Ninein constitutes a molecular link between microtubule nucleation and microtubule-anchoring activities at the centrosome. PCM1 is required for its centrosomal localization.
ATRIP
Gene structure. ATRIP (ATR-interacting protein) spans 21 kb. The longest transcript (isoform 1 - NM_130384.2) has 15 exons and encodes a protein of 791 amino acids.
Pathogenic variants.
Ogi et al [2012] identified a pathogenic nonsense variant in compound heterozygous state in an individual with SCKS. Although the authors demonstrated a splice defect leading to severe decrease in ATRIP expression in the patient (and modest reduction in the carrier father), they failed to identify the cause of this exon skipping (despite identifying two unreported SNPs in intron 1 -92 bp and -13 bp upstream of exon 2).
See Table 20 (pdf) for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.
Normal gene product. ATRIP is a component of the DNA damage checkpoint. It forms a heterodimer with ATR. It binds to single-stranded DNA coated with replication protein A that accumulates at sites of DNA damage. ATRP interacts with CEP164 (via N-terminus) and CINP.
ATRIP mediates the accumulation of ATR on damaged chromatin via an interaction with the RPA complex (which recognizes and coats single-stranded DNA), resulting in accumulation of the ATR kinase at intranuclear foci induced by DNA damage.
Abnormal gene product. Unknown
See Table 20 for a list of all reported pathogenic variants.