%0 Journal Article %T Distinct disease mutations in DNMT3A result in a spectrum of behavioral, epigenetic, and transcriptional deficits. %A Beard DC %A Zhang X %A Wu DY %A Martin JR %A Erickson A %A Boua JV %A Hamagami N %A Swift RG %A McCullough KB %A Ge X %A Bell-Hensley A %A Zheng H %A Palmer CW %A Fuhler NA %A Lawrence AB %A Hill CA %A Papouin T %A Noguchi KK %A McAlinden A %A Garbow JR %A Dougherty JD %A Maloney SE %A Gabel HW %J Cell Rep %V 42 %N 11 %D 2023 11 28 %M 37952155 暂无%R 10.1016/j.celrep.2023.113411 %X Phenotypic heterogeneity in monogenic neurodevelopmental disorders can arise from differential severity of variants underlying disease, but how distinct alleles drive variable disease presentation is not well understood. Here, we investigate missense mutations in DNA methyltransferase 3A (DNMT3A), a DNA methyltransferase associated with overgrowth, intellectual disability, and autism, to uncover molecular correlates of phenotypic heterogeneity. We generate a Dnmt3aP900L/+ mouse mimicking a mutation with mild to moderate severity and compare phenotypic and epigenomic effects with a severe R878H mutation. P900L mutants exhibit core growth and behavioral phenotypes shared across models but show subtle epigenomic changes, while R878H mutants display extensive disruptions. We identify mutation-specific dysregulated genes that may contribute to variable disease severity. Shared transcriptomic disruption identified across mutations overlaps dysregulation observed in other developmental disorder models and likely drives common phenotypes. Together, our findings define central drivers of DNMT3A disorders and illustrate how variable epigenomic disruption contributes to phenotypic heterogeneity in neurodevelopmental disease.