Author:
Parthasarathy Shridhar,Ruggiero Sarah M,Gelot Antoinette,Soardi Fernanda C,Ribeiro Bethânia F R,Pires Douglas E V,Ascher David B,Schmitt Alain,Rambaud Caroline,Xie Hongbo M,Lusk Laina,Wilmarth Olivia,McDonnell Pamela Pojomovsky,Juarez Olivia A,Grace Alexandra N,Buratti Julien,Mignot Cyril,Gras Domitille,Nava Caroline,Pierce Samuel R,Keren Boris,Kennedy Benjamin C,Pena Sergio D J,Helbig Ingo,Cuddapah Vishnu Anand
Abstract
AbstractHeterozygous pathogenic variants in DNM1 cause developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE) due to a dominant-negative mechanism impeding vesicular fission. Thus far, pathogenic variants in DNM1 have been studied using a canonical transcript that includes the alternatively spliced exon 10b. However, after performing RNA sequencing in thirty-nine pediatric brain samples, we find the primary transcript expressed in the brain includes the downstream exon 10a instead. Using this information, we evaluated genotype-phenotype correlations of variants affecting exon 10a and identified a cohort of eleven previously unreported individuals. Eight individuals harbor a recurrent de novo splice site variant, NG_029726.1(NM_001288739.1):c.1197-8G>A, which affects exon 10a and leads to DEE consistent with the classical DNM1 phenotype. We find this splice site variant leads to disease through an unexpected dominant-negative mechanism. Functional testing reveals an in-frame upstream splice acceptor causing insertion of two amino acids predicted to impair oligomerization-dependent activity. This is supported by neuropathological samples showing accumulation of synaptic vesicles adherent to the plasma membrane consistent with impaired vesicular fission. Two additional individuals with missense variants affecting exon 10a, p.(Arg399Trp) and p.(Gly401Asp), had a similar DEE phenotype. In contrast, a single individual with a missense variant affecting exon 10b, p.(Pro405Leu), which is less expressed in the brain, had a correspondingly less severe presentation. Thus, we implicate variants affecting exon 10a as causing the severe DEE typically associated with DNM1-related disorders. We highlight the importance of considering relevant isoforms for disease-causing variants, as well as the possibility of splice site variants acting through a dominant-negative mechanism.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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