Comprehensive analysis of CNOT3-related neurodevelopmental disorders: phenotypic and genotypic characterization.

Publication date: Jun 25, 2025

The CCR4-NOT complex, crucial in gene expression regulation, includes CNOT3, a subunit linked to neurodevelopmental disorders when mutated. This study investigates 51 patients from 42 families with heterozygous CNOT3 variants, aiming to expand the understanding of CNOT3-related neurodevelopmental disorders and explore genotype-phenotype correlations. Patients originated from various countries, reflecting the disorder’s global significance. All patients exhibited developmental delays, particularly in the language area. Intellectual disability was found in 87% of patients and was typically mild to moderate. Behavioral issues, including autism spectrum disorders and attention deficits, were common, affecting over half of the patients. Dysmorphic features were highlighted and may help establishing the diagnosis. Epilepsy was uncommon (10%). Twenty-eight novel variants were identified, including missense, nonsense, frameshift, intronic variations and a deletion of 12 exons. Missense variants clustered at the N- and C-terminal regions of the protein, indicating critical functional roles. No clear genotype-phenotype correlation was observed, suggesting that all identified variants resulted in a loss-of-function effect. Finally, this work delineates the clinical and molecular spectrum of CNOT3-related disorders thanks to an in-depth characterization of a large cohort. Further research will be necessary to understand the functional consequences of the variants and enhance patient long-term outcomes.

Concepts Keywords
Autism Characterization
Ccr4 Cnot3
Mild Comprehensive
Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Functional
Genotype
Identified
Including
Missense
Neurodevelopmental
Phenotype
Phenotypic
Related
Spectrum
Variants

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH neurodevelopmental disorders
disease MESH Intellectual disability
disease MESH autism spectrum disorders
disease MESH Epilepsy

Original Article

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