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Translation of cytoplasmic UBA1 contributes to VEXAS syndrome pathogenesis

Authors :
Marcela A. Ferrada
Sinisa Savic
Daniela Ospina Cardona
Jason C. Collins
Hugh Alessi
Fernanda Gutierrez-Rodrigues
Dinesh Babu Uthaya Kumar
Lorena Wilson
Wendy Goodspeed
James S. Topilow
Julie J. Paik
James A. Poulter
Tanaz A. Kermani
Matthew J. Koster
Kenneth J. Warrington
Catherine Cargo
Rachel S. Tattersall
Christopher J. A. Duncan
Anna Cantor
Patrycja Hoffmann
Elspeth M. Payne
Hanna Bonnekoh
Karoline Krause
Edward W. Cowen
Katherine R. Calvo
Bhavisha A. Patel
Amanda K. Ombrello
Daniel L. Kastner
Neal S. Young
Achim Werner
Peter C. Grayson
David B. Beck
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2022.

Abstract

Somatic mutations in UBA1 cause vacuoles, E1 ubiquitin-activating enzyme, X-linked, autoinflammatory somatic (VEXAS) syndrome, an adult-onset inflammatory disease with an overlap of hematologic manifestations. VEXAS syndrome is characterized by a high mortality rate and significant clinical heterogeneity. We sought to determine independent predictors of survival in VEXAS and to understand the mechanistic basis for these factors. We analyzed 83 patients with somatic pathogenic variants in UBA1 at p.Met41 (p.Met41Leu/Thr/Val), the start codon for translation of the cytoplasmic isoform of UBA1 (UBA1b). Patients with the p.Met41Val genotype were most likely to have an undifferentiated inflammatory syndrome. Multivariate analysis showed ear chondritis was associated with increased survival, whereas transfusion dependence and the p.Met41Val variant were independently associated with decreased survival. Using in vitro models and patient-derived cells, we demonstrate that p.Met41Val variant supports less UBA1b translation than either p.Met41Leu or p.Met41Thr, providing a molecular rationale for decreased survival. In addition, we show that these 3 canonical VEXAS variants produce more UBA1b than any of the 6 other possible single-nucleotide variants within this codon. Finally, we report a patient, clinically diagnosed with VEXAS syndrome, with 2 novel mutations in UBA1 occurring in cis on the same allele. One mutation (c.121 A>T; p.Met41Leu) caused severely reduced translation of UBA1b in a reporter assay, but coexpression with the second mutation (c.119 G>C; p.Gly40Ala) rescued UBA1b levels to those of canonical mutations. We conclude that regulation of residual UBA1b translation is fundamental to the pathogenesis of VEXAS syndrome and contributes to disease prognosis.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00064971
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....af8c674df36e5d2fbb8743262ff01d7b