Congenital mirror movements are associated with defective polymerisation of RAD51

Author:

Trouillard OrianeORCID,Dupaigne PaulineORCID,Dunoyer MargauxORCID,Doulazmi MohamedORCID,Herlin Morten KroghORCID,Frismand SolèneORCID,Riou AudreyORCID,Legros VéroniqueORCID,Chevreux GuillaumeORCID,Veaute XavierORCID,Busso DidierORCID,Fouquet CoralieORCID,Saint-Martin CécileORCID,Méneret AurélieORCID,Trembleau AlainORCID,Dusart IsabelleORCID,Dubacq CarolineORCID,Roze EmmanuelORCID

Abstract

BackgroundMirror movements are involuntary movements of one hand that mirror intentional movements of the other hand. Congenital mirror movements (CMM) is a rare genetic disorder with autosomal dominant inheritance, in which mirror movements are the main neurological manifestation. CMM is associated with an abnormal decussation of the corticospinal tract, a major motor tract for voluntary movements. RAD51 is known to play a key role in homologous recombination with a critical function in DNA repair. WhileRAD51haploinsufficiency was first proposed to explain CMM, other mechanisms could be involved.MethodsWe performed Sanger sequencing ofRAD51in five newly identified CMM families to identify new pathogenic variants. We further investigated the expression of wild-type and mutant RAD51 in the patients’ lymphoblasts at mRNA and protein levels. We then characterised the functions of RAD51 altered by non-truncating variants using biochemical approaches.ResultsThe level of wild-type RAD51 protein was lower in the cells of all patients with CMM compared with their non-carrier relatives. The reduction was less pronounced in asymptomatic carriers.In vitro, mutant RAD51 proteins showed loss-of-function for polymerisation, DNA binding and strand exchange activity.ConclusionOur study demonstrates thatRAD51haploinsufficiency, including loss-of-function of non-truncating variants, results in CMM. The incomplete penetrance likely results from post-transcriptional compensation. Changes in RAD51 levels and/or polymerisation properties could influence guidance of the corticospinal axons during development. Our findings open up new perspectives to understand the role of RAD51 in neurodevelopment.

Funder

Sorbonne Université

Orkyn

Merz-Pharma

within the framework of LabEx LIFESENSES

Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Elivie

Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

French state funds managed by the ANR within the Investissements d’Avenir program

Djillali Mehri

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

Fondation Desmarest

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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