6533b86ffe1ef96bd12cd7e8
RESEARCH PRODUCT
A homozygous MED11 C-terminal variant causes a lethal neurodegenerative disease.
Elisa Calì 1Sheng-jia Lin 2Clarissa Rocca 1Yavuz Sahin 3Aisha Al Shamsi 4Salima El Chehadeh 5Myriam Chaabouni 6Kshitij Mankad 7Evangelia Galanaki 1Stephanie Efthymiou 1Sniya Sudhakar 7Alkyoni Athanasiou-fragkouli 1Tamer ÇElik 8Nejat Narlı 9Sebastiano Bianca 10David Murphy 11Francisco Martins De Carvalho Moreira 12Synaps Study GroupAndrea Accogli 13Cassidy Petree 2Kevin Huang 2Kamel Monastiri 14Masoud Edizadeh 3Rosaria Nardello 11Marzia Ognibene 15Patrizia De Marco 15Martino Ruggieri 16Federico Zara 17Pasquale Striano 18Yavuz ŞAhin 19Lihadh Al-gazali 20Marie Therese Abi Warde 21Benedicte Gerard 22Giovanni Zifarelli 23Christian Beetz 23Sara Fortuna 24Miguel Soler 25Enza Maria Valente 26Gaurav Varshney 2Reza Maroofian 1Vincenzo Salpietro 27Henry Houlden 1Nardello. Rosariasubject
Human mediator complexMED11MEDopathies.description
Purpose: The mediator (MED) multisubunit-complex modulates the activity of the transcriptional machinery, and genetic defects in different MED subunits (17, 20, 27) have been implicated in neurologic diseases. In this study, we identified a recurrent homozygous variant in MED11 (c.325C>T; p.Arg109Ter) in 7 affected individuals from 5 unrelated families. Methods: To investigate the genetic cause of the disease, exome or genome sequencing were performed in 5 unrelated families identified via different research networks and Matchmaker Exchange. Deep clinical and brain imaging evaluations were performed by clinical pediatric neurologists and neuroradiologists. The functional effect of the candidate variant on both MED11 RNA and protein was assessed using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and western blotting using fibroblast cell lines derived from 1 affected individual and controls and through computational approaches. Knockouts in zebrafish were generated using clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats/Cas9. Results: The disease was characterized by microcephaly, profound neurodevelopmental impairment, exaggerated startle response, myoclonic seizures, progressive widespread neurodegeneration, and premature death. Functional studies on patient-derived fibroblasts did not show a loss of protein function but rather disruption of the C-terminal of MED11, likely impairing binding to other MED subunits. A zebrafish knockout model recapitulates key clinical phenotypes. Conclusion: Loss of the C-terminal of MED subunit 11 may affect its binding efficiency to other MED subunits, thus implicating the MED-complex stability in brain development and neurodegeneration.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2022-10-01 |