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A presumed missense variant in the U2AF2 gene causes exon skipping in neurodevelopmental diseases.

U2 small nuclear RNA auxiliary factor 2 (U2AF2) is an indispensable pre-mRNA splicing factor in the early process of splicing. Recently, U2AF2 was reported as a novel candidate gene associated with neurodevelopmental disorders. Herein, we report a patient with a novel presumed heterozygous missense variant in the U2AF2 gene (c.603G>T), who has a similar clinical phenotype as the patient reported before, including epilepsy, intellectual disability, language delay, microcephaly, and hypoplastic corpus callosum. We reviewed the phenotypic and genetic spectrum of patients with U2AF2-related neurological diseases, both newly diagnosed and previously reported. To investigate the possible pathogenesis, EBV-immortalized lymphoblastoid cells were derived from the peripheral blood obtained from the patient and control groups. Furthermore, according to the results of WB, RT-PCR, Q-PCR, and cDNA sequencing of RT-PCR products, the presumed missense variant c.603G>T caused exon 6 skipping in the U2AF2 mRNA transcript and led to a truncated protein (p.E163_E201del). Cell Counting Kit-8 (CCK-8) and cell cycle detection demonstrated that the variant c.603G>T inhibited the proliferation of patient lymphocyte cells compared with the control group. This study is aimed at expanding the phenotypic and genetic spectrum of U2AF2-related neurodevelopmental diseases and investigating the potential effects. This is the first report of the possible pathogenesis of a U2AF2 gene pathogenic variant in a patient with neurodevelopmental diseases and shows that a novel presumed missense variant in the U2AF2 gene causes exon skipping.

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