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Multi-omics identifies large mitoribosomal subunit instability caused by pathogenic MRPL39 variants as a cause of pediatric onset mitochondrial disease

Authors :
Sumudu S C Amarasekera
Daniella H Hock
Nicole J Lake
Sarah E Calvo
Sabine W Grønborg
Emma I Krzesinski
David J Amor
Michael C Fahey
Cas Simons
Flemming Wibrand
Vamsi K Mootha
Monkol Lek
Sebastian Lunke
Zornitza Stark
Elsebet Østergaard
John Christodoulou
David R Thorburn
David A Stroud
Alison G Compton
Source :
Human Molecular Genetics.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2023.

Abstract

MRPL39 encodes one of 52 proteins comprising the large subunit of the mitochondrial ribosome (mitoribosome). In conjunction with 30 proteins in the small subunit, the mitoribosome synthesizes the 13 subunits of the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation or OXPHOS system encoded by mitochondrial DNA. We used multi-omics and gene matching to identify three unrelated individuals with biallelic variants in MRPL39 presenting with multisystem diseases with severity ranging from lethal, infantile onset (Leigh syndrome spectrum) to milder with survival into adulthood. Clinical exome sequencing of known disease genes failed to diagnose these patients; however quantitative proteomics identified a specific decrease in the abundance of large but not small mitoribosomal subunits in fibroblasts from the two patients with severe phenotype. Re-analysis of exome sequencing led to the identification of candidate single heterozygous variants in mitoribosomal genes MRPL39 (both patients) and MRPL15. Genome sequencing identified a shared deep intronic MRPL39 variant predicted to generate a cryptic exon, with transcriptomics and targeted studies providing further functional evidence for causation. The patient with milder disease was homozygous for a missense variant identified through trio exome sequencing. Our study highlights the utility of quantitative proteomics in detection of protein signatures and in characterization of gene-disease associations in exome-unsolved patients. We describe Relative Complex Abundance analysis of proteomics data, a sensitive method that can identify defects in OXPHOS disorders to a similar or greater sensitivity to the traditional enzymology. Relative Complex Abundance has potential utility for functional validation or prioritization in many hundreds of inherited rare diseases where protein complex assembly is disrupted.

Details

ISSN :
14602083 and 09646906
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human Molecular Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........816fde7086f5cb842c879e453a664cc4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddad069