Author:
Parenti Ilaria,Diab Farah,Gil Sara Ruiz,Mulugeta Eskeatnaf,Casa Valentina,Berutti Riccardo,Brouwer Rutger W.W.,Dupé Valerie,Eckhold Juliane,Graf Elisabeth,Puisac Beatriz,Ramos Feliciano,Schwarzmayr Thomas,van Staveren Thomas,van IJcken Wilfred F. J.,Strom Tim M.,Pié Juan,Watrin Erwan,Kaiser Frank J.,Wendt Kerstin S.
Abstract
ABSTRACTCornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) is a rare developmental disorder caused by mutations in genes related to the cohesin complex. For its association with chromatin, cohesin depends on a heterodimer formed by NIPBL and MAU2, which interact via their respective N-termini. Variants in NIPBL are the main cause of CdLS and result in NIPBL haploinsufficiency.Using CRISPR, we generated cells homozygous for an out-of-frame duplication in NIPBL. Remarkably, alternative translation initiation rescued NIPBL expression in these cells and produced an N-terminally truncated NIPBL that lacks MAU2-interaction domain, causing a dramatic reduction of MAU2 protein levels. Strikingly, this protective mechanism allows nearly normal amounts of cohesin to be loaded onto chromatin in a manner that is independent of functional NIPBL/MAU2 complexes and therefore in contrast to previous findings.We also report the first pathogenic variant in MAU2, a deletion of seven amino acids important for wrapping the N-terminus of NIPBL within MAU2. The mutation causes dramatic reduction of MAU2 heterodimerization with NIPBL, hence undermining the stability of both proteins.Our data confirm NIPBL haploinsufficiency as the major pathogenic mechanism of CdLS and give new insights into the molecular mechanisms responsible for this neurodevelopmental disorder. Our work also unveils an alternative translation-based mechanism that protects cells from out-of-frame variants of NIPBL and that may be of relevance in other genetic conditions.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory