Destabilizing NF1 variants act in a dominant negative manner through neurofibromin dimerization

Author:

Young Lucy C.1ORCID,Goldstein de Salazar Ruby1,Han Sae-Won2ORCID,Huang Zi Yi Stephanie1ORCID,Merk Alan3,Drew Matthew4ORCID,Darling Joseph3,Wall Vanessa4ORCID,Grisshammer Reinhard3,Cheng Alice1,Allison Madeline R.1,Sale Matthew J.1,Nissley Dwight V.4ORCID,Esposito Dominic4ORCID,Ognjenovic Jana3,McCormick Frank1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94153

2. Department of Internal Medicine, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul 03080, Republic of Korea

3. National Cryo-EM Program, Cancer Research Technology Program, Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research, Frederick, MD 21702

4. National Cancer Institute RAS Initiative, Cancer Research Technology Program, Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research, Frederick, MD 21702

Abstract

The majority of pathogenic mutations in the neurofibromatosis type I ( NF1 ) gene reduce total neurofibromin protein expression through premature truncation or microdeletion, but it is less well understood how loss-of-function missense variants drive NF1 disease. We have found that patient variants in codons 844 to 848, which correlate with a severe phenotype, cause protein instability and exert an additional dominant-negative action whereby wild-type neurofibromin also becomes destabilized through protein dimerization. We have used our neurofibromin cryogenic electron microscopy structure to predict and validate other patient variants that act through a similar mechanism. This provides a foundation for understanding genotype–phenotype correlations and has important implications for patient counseling, disease management, and therapeutics.

Funder

DOD | US Army | MEDCOM | Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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