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Characterization of a missense variant in COG5 in a Tunisian patient with COG5-CDG syndrome and insights into the effect of non-synonymous variants on COG5 protein

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SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
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Khabou, Boudour
Sahari, Umar Bin Mohamad
ben Issa, Abir
Bouchaala, Wafa
Szenker-Ravi, Emmanuelle
Ng, Alvin Yu Jin
Bonnard, Carine
Mbarek, Hamdi
Zeyaul, Islam
Fakhfakh, Faiza

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The clinical diagnosis of patients with multisystem involvement including a pronounced neurologic damage is challenging. High-throughput sequencing methods remains crucial to provide an accurate diagnosis. In this study, we reported a Tunisian patient manifesting hypotonia and global developmental delay with visual and skin abnormalities. Exome sequencing was conducted followed by segregation analysis and, subsequently additional investigations. In silico analysis of non-synonymous variants (nsSNPs) described in COG5 in conserved positions was made. Results revealed a homozygous missense variant c.298 C > T (p.Leu100Phe) in the COG5 inherited from both parents. This variant altered both protein solubility and stability, in addition to a putative disruption of the COG5-COG7 interaction. This disruption has been confirmed using patient-derived cells in vitro in a COG5 co-immuno-precipitation, where interaction with binding partner COG7 was abrogated. Hence, we established the COG5-CDG diagnosis. Clinically, the patient shared common features with the already described cases with the report of the ichtyosis as a new manifestation. Conversely, the CADD scoring revealed 19 putatively pathogenic nsSNPs (Minor Allele Frequency MAF < 0.001, CADD > 30), 11 of which had a significant impact on the solubility and/or stability of COG5. These properties seem to be disrupted by six of the seven missense COG5-CDG variants. In conclusion, our study expands the genetic and phenotypic spectrum of COG5-CDG disease and highlight the utility of the next generation sequencing as a powerful tool in accurate diagnosis. Our results shed light on a likely molecular mechanism underlying the pathogenic effect of missense COG5 variants, which is the alteration of COG5 stability and solubility.

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SPRINGERNATURE

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Medicine

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Journal of Human Genetics

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10.1038/s10038-024-01273-2

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