Molecular and clinical characterization of a founder mutation causing G6PC3 deficiency

Author:

Zhen Xin,Betti Michael JORCID,Kars Meltem EceORCID,Patterson AndrewORCID,Medina-Torres Edgar Alejandro,Mendoza Selma Cecilia Scheffler,Sánchez Diana Andrea Herrera,Lopez-Herrera Gabriela,Svyryd YevgeniyaORCID,Mutchinick Osvaldo M.ORCID,Gamazon EricORCID,Rathmell Jeffrey CORCID,Itan YuvalORCID,Markle JanetORCID,Romanillos Patricia O’FarrillORCID,Lugo-Reyes Saul OswaldoORCID,Martinez-Barricarte RubenORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundG6PC3 deficiency is a rare genetic disorder that causes syndromic congenital neutropenia. It is driven by the intracellular accumulation of a metabolite named 1,5-anhydroglucitol-6-phosphate (1,5-AG6P) that inhibits glycolysis. Patients display heterogeneous extra-hematological manifestations, contributing to delayed diagnosis.ObjectiveTheG6PC3c.210delC variant has been identified in patients of Mexican origin. We set out to study the origin and functional consequence of this mutation. Furthermore, we sought to characterize the clinical phenotypes caused by it.MethodsUsing whole-genome sequencing data, we conducted haplotype analysis to estimate the age of this allele and traced its ancestral origin. We examined how this mutation affected G6PC3 protein expression and performed extracellular flux assays on patient-derived cells to characterize how this mutation impacts glycolysis. Finally, we compared the clinical presentations of patients with the c.210delC mutation relative to other G6PC3 deficient patients published to date.ResultsBased on the length of haplotypes shared amongst ten carriers of theG6PC3c.210delC mutation, we estimated that this variant originated in a common ancestor of indigenous American origin. The mutation causes a frameshift that introduces a premature stop codon, leading to a complete loss of G6PC3 protein expression. When treated with 1,5-anhydroglucitol (1,5-AG), the precursor to 1,5-AG6P, patient-derived cells exhibited markedly reduced engagement of glycolysis. Clinically, c.210delC carriers display all the clinical features of syndromic severe congenital neutropenia type 4 observed in prior reports of G6PC3 deficiency.ConclusionTheG6PC3c.210delC is a loss-of-function mutation that arose from a founder effect in the indigenous Mexican population. These findings may facilitate the diagnosis of additional patients in this geographical area. Moreover, thein vitro1,5-AG-dependent functional assay used in our study could be employed to assess the pathogenicity of additionalG6PC3variants.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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