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Loss of UGP2 in brain leads to a severe epileptic encephalopathy, emphasizing that bi-allelic isoform specific start-loss mutations of essential genes can cause genetic diseases

Authors :
Henry Houlden
Aida M. Bertoli-Avella
Marjon van Slegtenhorst
Edwin H. Jacobs
Ehsan Ghayoor Karimiani
Eleonora Aronica
Peter Bauer
Atieh Eslahi
Amna Al Futaisi
Tjakko J. van Ham
Jennefer N. Kohler
Stephanie Efthymiou
Reza Maroofian
Darija Putar
Mariya Kozenko
Jana Vandrovcova
Walter G. de Valk
Jonathan A. Bernstein
Amber Begtrup
Kyle Retterer
Renjith Mani
Jozef Hertecant
Evita Medici-van den Herik
Alice S. Brooks
Elena Perenthaler
Rebecca I. Torene
Woutje M. Berdowski
Wilfred F. J. van IJcken
Kristin G. Monaghan
Majid Mojarrad
Nuzhat Rana
Anita Nikoncuk
Faisal Zafar
Tahsin Stefan Barakat
Paul van den Berg
Soheil Yousefi
Krishna Kumar Kandaswamy
Ivan Čapo
Fathiya Al Murshedi
Fateme Massinaei Darmiyan
Faisal Al Azri
Lauren Brick
Erik-Jan Kamsteeg
Mehrnaz Ghazvini
Herma C. van der Linde
Mohammad Doosti
Zaynab Khazaei
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

Developmental and/or epileptic encephalopathies (DEEs) are a group of devastating genetic disorders, resulting in early onset, therapy resistant seizures and developmental delay. Here we report on 12 individuals from 10 families presenting with a severe form of intractable epilepsy, severe developmental delay, progressive microcephaly and visual disturbance. Whole exome sequencing identified a recurrent, homozygous variant (chr2:64083454A>G) in the essentialUDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase(UGP2) gene in all probands. This rare variant results in a tolerable Met12Val missense change of the longer UGP2 protein isoform but causes a disruption of the start codon of the shorter isoform. We show that the absence of the shorter isoform leads to a reduction of functional UGP2 enzyme in brain cell types, leading to altered glycogen metabolism, upregulated unfolded protein response and premature neuronal differentiation, as modelled during pluripotent stem cell differentiationin vitro. In contrast, the complete lack of all UGP2 isoforms leads to differentiation defects in multiple lineages in human cells. Reduced expression of Ugp2a/Ugp2bin vivoin zebrafish mimics visual disturbance and mutant animals show a behavioral phenotype. Our study identifies a recurrent start codon mutation inUGP2as a cause of a novel autosomal recessive DEE. Importantly, it also shows that isoform specific start-loss mutations causing expression loss of a tissue relevant isoform of an essential protein can cause a genetic disease, even when an organism-wide protein absence is incompatible with life. We provide additional examples where a similar disease mechanism applies.

Details

ISSN :
64083454
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....06c4b577045a973710996858873c7795