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A syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder caused by rare variants in PPFIA3.

Authors :
Paul MS
Michener SL
Pan H
Chan H
Pfliger JM
Rosenfeld JA
Lerma VC
Tran A
Longley MA
Lewis RA
Weisz-Hubshman M
Bekheirnia MR
Bekheirnia N
Massingham L
Zech M
Wagner M
Engels H
Cremer K
Mangold E
Peters S
Trautmann J
Mester JL
Guillen Sacoto MJ
Person R
McDonnell PP
Cohen SR
Lusk L
Cohen ASA
Le Pichon JB
Pastinen T
Zhou D
Engleman K
Racine C
Faivre L
Moutton S
Denommé-Pichon AS
Koh HY
Poduri A
Bolton J
Knopp C
Julia Suh DS
Maier A
Toosi MB
Karimiani EG
Maroofian R
Schaefer GB
Ramakumaran V
Vasudevan P
Prasad C
Osmond M
Schuhmann S
Vasileiou G
Russ-Hall S
Scheffer IE
Carvill GL
Mefford H
Bacino CA
Lee BH
Chao HT
Source :
American journal of human genetics [Am J Hum Genet] 2024 Jan 04; Vol. 111 (1), pp. 96-118.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

PPFIA3 encodes the protein-tyrosine phosphatase, receptor-type, F-polypeptide-interacting-protein-alpha-3 (PPFIA3), which is a member of the LAR-protein-tyrosine phosphatase-interacting-protein (liprin) family involved in synapse formation and function, synaptic vesicle transport, and presynaptic active zone assembly. The protein structure and function are evolutionarily well conserved, but human diseases related to PPFIA3 dysfunction are not yet reported in OMIM. Here, we report 20 individuals with rare PPFIA3 variants (19 heterozygous and 1 compound heterozygous) presenting with developmental delay, intellectual disability, hypotonia, dysmorphisms, microcephaly or macrocephaly, autistic features, and epilepsy with reduced penetrance. Seventeen unique PPFIA3 variants were detected in 18 families. To determine the pathogenicity of PPFIA3 variants in vivo, we generated transgenic fruit flies producing either human wild-type (WT) PPFIA3 or five missense variants using GAL4-UAS targeted gene expression systems. In the fly overexpression assays, we found that the PPFIA3 variants in the region encoding the N-terminal coiled-coil domain exhibited stronger phenotypes compared to those affecting the C-terminal region. In the loss-of-function fly assay, we show that the homozygous loss of fly Liprin-α leads to embryonic lethality. This lethality is partially rescued by the expression of human PPFIA3 WT, suggesting human PPFIA3 function is partially conserved in the fly. However, two of the tested variants failed to rescue the lethality at the larval stage and one variant failed to rescue lethality at the adult stage. Altogether, the human and fruit fly data reveal that the rare PPFIA3 variants are dominant-negative loss-of-function alleles that perturb multiple developmental processes and synapse formation.<br />Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The Department of Molecular and Human Genetics at Baylor College of Medicine derives revenue from the clinical exome sequencing services offered at Baylor Genetics. J.L.M., M.J.G.S., and R.P. are employees of GeneDx, LLC.<br /> (Copyright © 2023 American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1537-6605
Volume :
111
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of human genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38181735
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2023.12.004