Dominant ARF3 variants disrupt Golgi integrity and cause a neurodevelopmental disorder recapitulated in zebrafish
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Published:2022-11-11
Issue:1
Volume:13
Page:
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ISSN:2041-1723
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Container-title:Nature Communications
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat Commun
Author:
Fasano GiuliaORCID, Muto Valentina, Radio Francesca ClementinaORCID, Venditti Martina, Mosaddeghzadeh Niloufar, Coppola Simona, Paradisi Graziamaria, Zara Erika, Bazgir FarhadORCID, Ziegler Alban, Chillemi GiovanniORCID, Bertuccini LuciaORCID, Tinari AntonellaORCID, Vetro Annalisa, Pantaleoni FrancescaORCID, Pizzi Simone, Conti Libenzio AdrianORCID, Petrini StefaniaORCID, Bruselles AlessandroORCID, Prandi Ingrid Guarnetti, Mancini Cecilia, Chandramouli Balasubramanian, Barth Magalie, Bris Céline, Milani Donatella, Selicorni Angelo, Macchiaiolo Marina, Gonfiantini Michaela V., Bartuli Andrea, Mariani Riccardo, Curry Cynthia J., Guerrini Renzo, Slavotinek Anne, Iascone Maria, Dallapiccola Bruno, Ahmadian Mohammad RezaORCID, Lauri AntonellaORCID, Tartaglia MarcoORCID
Abstract
AbstractVesicle biogenesis, trafficking and signaling via Endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi network support essential developmental processes and their disruption lead to neurodevelopmental disorders and neurodegeneration. We report that de novo missense variants in ARF3, encoding a small GTPase regulating Golgi dynamics, cause a developmental disease in humans impairing nervous system and skeletal formation. Microcephaly-associated ARF3 variants affect residues within the guanine nucleotide binding pocket and variably perturb protein stability and GTP/GDP binding. Functional analysis demonstrates variably disruptive consequences of ARF3 variants on Golgi morphology, vesicles assembly and trafficking. Disease modeling in zebrafish validates further the dominant behavior of the mutants and their differential impact on brain and body plan formation, recapitulating the variable disease expression. In-depth in vivo analyses traces back impaired neural precursors’ proliferation and planar cell polarity-dependent cell movements as the earliest detectable effects. Our findings document a key role of ARF3 in Golgi function and demonstrate its pleiotropic impact on development.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary
Reference155 articles.
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