Deep computational phenotyping of genomic variants impacting the SET domain of KMT2C reveal molecular mechanisms for their dysfunction

Author:

Jorge Salomão Dória,Chi Young-In,Mazaba Jose Lizarraga,Haque Neshatul,Wagenknecht Jessica,Smith Brian C.,Volkman Brian F.,Mathison Angela J.,Lomberk Gwen,Zimmermann Michael T.,Urrutia Raul

Abstract

Introduction: Kleefstra Syndrome type 2 (KLEFS-2) is a genetic, neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by intellectual disability, infantile hypotonia, severe expressive language delay, and characteristic facial appearance, with a spectrum of other distinct clinical manifestations. Pathogenic mutations in the epigenetic modifier type 2 lysine methyltransferase KMT2C have been identified to be causative in KLEFS-2 individuals.Methods: This work reports a translational genomic study that applies a multidimensional computational approach for deep variant phenotyping, combining conventional genomic analyses, advanced protein bioinformatics, computational biophysics, biochemistry, and biostatistics-based modeling. We use standard variant annotation, paralog annotation analyses, molecular mechanics, and molecular dynamics simulations to evaluate damaging scores and provide potential mechanisms underlying KMT2C variant dysfunction.Results: We integrated data derived from the structure and dynamics of KMT2C to classify variants into SV (Structural Variant), DV (Dynamic Variant), SDV (Structural and Dynamic Variant), and VUS (Variant of Uncertain Significance). When compared with controls, these variants show values reflecting alterations in molecular fitness in both structure and dynamics.Discussion: We demonstrate that our 3D models for KMT2C variants suggest distinct mechanisms that lead to their imbalance and are not predictable from sequence alone. Thus, the missense variants studied here cause destabilizing effects on KMT2C function by different biophysical and biochemical mechanisms which we adeptly describe. This new knowledge extends our understanding of how variations in the KMT2C gene cause the dysfunction of its methyltransferase enzyme product, thereby bearing significant biomedical relevance for carriers of KLEFS2-associated genomic mutations.

Funder

Advancing a Healthier Wisconsin Endowment

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Medicine

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