Focal cortical dysplasia II caused by brain somatic mutation of IRS-1 is associated with ERK signaling pathway activation

Author:

Li Xiao123ORCID,Wang Tianshuang4,Liu Nana123,Cai Aojie123,Zhang Junjiao123,Zhang Fan123,Liu Qingzhu3,Wang Jingmin12356,Wu Ye123,Gao Kai12356,Jiang Yu-Wu123567

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics, Peking University First Hospital , No. 1 Xi’an Men Street, West District, Beijing 100034 , China

2. Beijing Key Laboratory of Molecular Diagnosis and Study on Pediatric Genetic Diseases , No. 1 Xi’an Men Street, West District, Beijing 100034 , China

3. Children Epilepsy Center, Peking University First Hospital , No. 1 Xi’an Men Street, West District, Beijing 100034 , China

4. Department of Neurology, Children’s Hospital of Fudan University, National Children’s Medical Center , 399 Wanyuan Road, Minhang District, Shanghai 201102 , China

5. Key Laboratory for Neuroscience , Ministry of Education/National Health and Family Planning Commission, , No. 1 Xi’an Men Street, West District, Beijing 100034 , China

6. Peking University , Ministry of Education/National Health and Family Planning Commission, , No. 1 Xi’an Men Street, West District, Beijing 100034 , China

7. Center of Epilepsy, Beijing Institute for Brain Disorders , No. 1 Xi’an Men Street, West District, Beijing 100034 , China

Abstract

Abstract Somatic mutations have been identified in 10% to 63% of focal cortical dysplasia type II samples, primarily linked to the mTOR pathway. When the causative genetic mutations are not identified, this opens the possibility of discovering new pathogenic genes or pathways that could be contributing to the condition. In our previous study, we identified a novel candidate pathogenic somatic variant of IRS-1 c.1791dupG in the brain tissue of a child with focal cortical dysplasia type II. This study further explored the variant’s role in causing type II focal cortical dysplasia through in vitro overexpression in 293T and SH-SY5Y cells and in vivo evaluation via in utero electroporation in fetal brains, assessing effects on neuronal migration, morphology, and network integrity. It was found that the mutant IRS-1 variant led to hyperactivity of p-ERK, increased cell volume, and was predominantly associated with the MAPK signaling pathway. In vivo, the IRS-1 c.1791dupG variant induced abnormal neuron migration, cytomegaly, and network hyperexcitability. Notably, the ERK inhibitor GDC-0994, rather than the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin, effectively rescued the neuronal defects. This study directly highlighted the ERK signaling pathway’s role in the pathogenesis of focal cortical dysplasia II and provided a new therapeutic target for cases of focal cortical dysplasia II that are not treatable by rapamycin analogs.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Beijing Natural Science Foundation

Key Project of Clinical Medicine Research of National Clinical Research Center for Child Health and Disorders

Children’s Hospital of Chongqing Medical University

Capital Health Research and Development of Special

Beijing Key Laboratory of Molecular Diagnosis and Study on Pediatric Genetic Diseases

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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