- Ferguson, Cole J;
- Urso, Olivia;
- Bodrug, Tatyana;
- Gassaway, Brandon M;
- Watson, Edmond R;
- Prabu, Jesuraj R;
- Lara-Gonzalez, Pablo;
- Martinez-Chacin, Raquel C;
- Wu, Dennis Y;
- Brigatti, Karlla W;
- Puffenberger, Erik G;
- Taylor, Cora M;
- Haas-Givler, Barbara;
- Jinks, Robert N;
- Strauss, Kevin A;
- Desai, Arshad;
- Gabel, Harrison W;
- Gygi, Steven P;
- Schulman, Brenda A;
- Brown, Nicholas G;
- Bonni, Azad
Neurodevelopmental cognitive disorders provide insights into mechanisms of human brain development. Here, we report an intellectual disability syndrome caused by the loss of APC7, a core component of the E3 ubiquitin ligase anaphase promoting complex (APC). In mechanistic studies, we uncover a critical role for APC7 during the recruitment and ubiquitination of APC substrates. In proteomics analyses of the brain from mice harboring the patient-specific APC7 mutation, we identify the chromatin-associated protein Ki-67 as an APC7-dependent substrate of the APC in neurons. Conditional knockout of the APC coactivator protein Cdh1, but not Cdc20, leads to the accumulation of Ki-67 protein in neurons in vivo, suggesting that APC7 is required for the function of Cdh1-APC in the brain. Deregulated neuronal Ki-67 upon APC7 loss localizes predominantly to constitutive heterochromatin. Our findings define an essential function for APC7 and Cdh1-APC in neuronal heterochromatin regulation, with implications for understanding human brain development and disease.