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Aberrant phase separation and nucleolar dysfunction in rare genetic diseases

Authors :
Martin A. Mensah
Henri Niskanen
Alexandre P. Magalhaes
Shaon Basu
Martin Kircher
Henrike L. Sczakiel
Alisa M. V. Reiter
Jonas Elsner
Peter Meinecke
Saskia Biskup
Brian H. Y. Chung
Gregor Dombrowsky
Christel Eckmann-Scholz
Marc Phillip Hitz
Alexander Hoischen
Paul-Martin Holterhus
Wiebke Hülsemann
Kimia Kahrizi
Vera M. Kalscheuer
Anita Kan
Mandy Krumbiegel
Ingo Kurth
Jonas Leubner
Ann Carolin Longardt
Jörg D. Moritz
Hossein Najmabadi
Karolina Skipalova
Lot Snijders Blok
Andreas Tzschach
Eberhard Wiedersberg
Martin Zenker
Carla Garcia-Cabau
René Buschow
Xavier Salvatella
Matthew L. Kraushar
Stefan Mundlos
Almuth Caliebe
Malte Spielmann
Denise Horn
Denes Hnisz
Source :
Nature, Nature, 614, 7948, pp. 564-571, Nature, 614, 564-571
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Nature, 2023.

Abstract

Thousands of genetic variants in protein-coding genes have been linked to disease. However, the functional impact of most variants is unknown as they occur within intrinsically disordered protein regions that have poorly defined functions1–3. Intrinsically disordered regions can mediate phase separation and the formation of biomolecular condensates, such as the nucleolus4,5. This suggests that mutations in disordered proteins may alter condensate properties and function6–8. Here we show that a subset of disease-associated variants in disordered regions alter phase separation, cause mispartitioning into the nucleolus and disrupt nucleolar function. We discover de novo frameshift variants in HMGB1 that cause brachyphalangy, polydactyly and tibial aplasia syndrome, a rare complex malformation syndrome. The frameshifts replace the intrinsically disordered acidic tail of HMGB1 with an arginine-rich basic tail. The mutant tail alters HMGB1 phase separation, enhances its partitioning into the nucleolus and causes nucleolar dysfunction. We built a catalogue of more than 200,000 variants in disordered carboxy-terminal tails and identified more than 600 frameshifts that create arginine-rich basic tails in transcription factors and other proteins. For 12 out of the 13 disease-associated variants tested, the mutation enhanced partitioning into the nucleolus, and several variants altered rRNA biogenesis. These data identify the cause of a rare complex syndrome and suggest that a large number of genetic variants may dysregulate nucleoli and other biomolecular condensates in humans.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature, Nature, 614, 7948, pp. 564-571, Nature, 614, 564-571
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d7d44f81500de5059b7ca491edb8534c