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New cases that expand the genotypic and phenotypic spectrum of Congenital NAD Deficiency Disorder

Authors :
Millan S. Patel
Halenur Yavuz-Kienle
Alicia P Acyinena
Diane Myles-Reid
Tim Van Mieghem
Anna M. Cueto-González
Causes Study
Susan Blaser
Miereia D T Riera
Silvia A Martínez
Shannon Rego
Walter Patrick Devine
Patrick Shannon
Karen Chong
Heyko Skladny
Sally L. Dunwoodie
Gavin Chapman
Justin O. Szot
Oliver Brandau
Dimitri J. Stavropoulos
Anne Slavotinek
Eduardo F. Tizzano
Alison M. Elliott
Vanda McNiven
Lucie Dupuis
Marjan M. Nezarati
Robert S. Phillips
Kristen Miller
Roberto Mendoza-Londono
ANS - Cellular & Molecular Mechanisms
AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
Source :
Human mutation, 42(7), 862-876. Wiley-Liss Inc., Hum Mutat
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2021.

Abstract

Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) is an essential cofactor involved in over 400 cellular reactions. During embryogenesis, mammals synthesize NAD de novo from dietary L-tryptophan via the kynurenine pathway. Biallelic, inactivating variants in three genes encoding enzymes of this biosynthesis pathway (KYNU, HAAO, and NADSYN1) disrupt NAD synthesis and have been identified in patients with multiple malformations of the heart, kidney, vertebrae, and limbs; these patients have Congenital NAD Deficiency Disorder. Here we have identified a further three families with biallelic variants in HAAO and four families with biallelic variants in KYNU. These patients present similarly with multiple malformations of the heart, kidney, vertebrae, and limbs, of variable severity. We show that each variant identified in these patients results in loss-of-function, revealed by significant reduction in NAD levels via yeast genetic complementation assays. For the first time missense mutations are identified as a cause of malformation and shown to disrupt enzyme function. These missense and frameshift variants cause moderate to severe NAD deficiency in yeast, analogous to insufficient synthesized NAD in patients. We hereby expand the genotypic and corresponding phenotypic spectrum of Congenital NAD Deficiency Disorder.

Details

ISSN :
10981004 and 10597794
Volume :
42
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human Mutation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4cb52f60e935bbd489940ccdd80426e3