SOXopathies: Growing Family of Developmental Disorders Due to SOX Mutations

Publication date: Available online 6 July 2019Source: Trends in GeneticsAuthor(s): Marco Angelozzi, Véronique LefebvreThe SRY-related (SOX) transcription factor family pivotally contributes to determining cell fate and identity in many lineages. Since the original discovery that SRY deletions cause sex reversal, mutations in half of the 20 human SOX genes have been associated with rare congenital disorders, henceforward called SOXopathies. Mutations are generally de novo, heterozygous, and inactivating, revealing gene haploinsufficiency, but other types, including duplications, have been reported too. Missense variants primarily target the HMG domain, the SOX hallmark that mediates DNA binding and bending, nuclear trafficking, and protein–protein interactions. We here review key clinical and molecular features of SOXopathies and discuss the prospect that the disease family likely involves more SOX genes and larger clinical and genetic spectrums than currently appreciated.
Source: Trends in Genetics - Category: Genetics & Stem Cells Source Type: research
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