- Scala, Marcello;
- Khan, Kamal;
- Beneteau, Claire;
- Fox, Rachel;
- von Hardenberg, Sandra;
- Khan, Ayaz;
- Joubert, Madeleine;
- Fievet, Lorraine;
- Musquer, Marie;
- Le Vaillant, Claudine;
- Holsclaw, Julie;
- Lim, Derek;
- Berking, Ann-Cathrine;
- Accogli, Andrea;
- Giacomini, Thea;
- Nobili, Lino;
- Striano, Pasquale;
- Zara, Federico;
- Torella, Annalaura;
- Nigro, Vincenzo;
- Cogné, Benjamin;
- Salick, Max;
- Kaykas, Ajamete;
- Eggan, Kevin;
- Capra, Valeria;
- Bézieau, Stéphane;
- Davis, Erica;
- Wells, Michael
PURPOSE: We established the genetic etiology of a syndromic neurodevelopmental condition characterized by variable cognitive impairment, recognizable facial dysmorphism, and a constellation of extra-neurological manifestations. METHODS: We performed phenotypic characterization of 6 participants from 4 unrelated families presenting with a neurodevelopmental syndrome and used exome sequencing to investigate the underlying genetic cause. To probe relevance to the neurodevelopmental phenotype and craniofacial dysmorphism, we established two- and three-dimensional human stem cell-derived neural models and generated a stable cachd1 zebrafish mutant on a transgenic cartilage reporter line. RESULTS: Affected individuals showed mild cognitive impairment, dysmorphism featuring oculo-auriculo abnormalities, and developmental defects involving genitourinary and digestive tracts. Exome sequencing revealed biallelic putative loss-of-function variants in CACHD1 segregating with disease in all pedigrees. RNA sequencing in CACHD1-depleted neural progenitors revealed abnormal expression of genes with key roles in Wnt signaling, neurodevelopment, and organ morphogenesis. CACHD1 depletion in neural progenitors resulted in reduced percentages of post-mitotic neurons and enlargement of 3D neurospheres. Homozygous cachd1 mutant larvae showed mandibular patterning defects mimicking human facial dysmorphism. CONCLUSION: Our findings support the role of loss-of-function variants in CACHD1 as the cause of a rare neurodevelopmental syndrome with facial dysmorphism and multisystem abnormalities.