Publication: Rabenosyn separation-of-function mutations uncouple endosomal recycling from lysosomal degradation, causing a distinct Mendelian disorder
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Program
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Paul, Franziska
Ng, Calista
Mohamad Sahari, Umar Bin
Nafissi, Shahriar
Nilipoor, Yalda
Tavasoli, Ali Reza
Bonnard, Carine
Wong, Pui-Mun
Estiar, Mehrdad A.
Majoie, Charles B.
Advisor
Publication Date
2022
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Rabenosyn (RBSN) is a conserved endosomal protein necessary for regulating internalized cargo. Here, we present clinical, genetic, cellular and biochemical evidence that two distinct RBSN missense variants are responsible for a novel Mendelian disorder consisting of progressive muscle weakness, facial dysmorphisms, ophthalmoplegia and intellectual disability. Using exome sequencing, we identified recessively acting germline alleles p.Arg180Gly and p.Gly183Arg, which are both situated in the FYVE domain of RBSN. We find that these variants abrogate binding to its cognate substrate phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PI3P) and thus prevent its translocation to early endosomes. Although the endosomal recycling pathway was unaltered, mutant p.Gly183Arg patient fibroblasts show accumulation of cargo tagged for lysosomal degradation. Our results suggest that these variants are separation-of-function alleles, which cause a delay in endosomal maturation without affecting cargo recycling. We conclude that distinct germline mutations in RBSN cause non-overlapping phenotypes with specific and discrete endolysosomal cellular defects.
Description
Source:
Human molecular genetics
Publisher:
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Keywords:
Subject
Biochemistry and molecular biology, Genetics and heredity