Revealing function-altering MECP2 mutations in individuals with autism spectrum disorder using yeast and Drosophila.

IF 5.1 3区 生物学 Q2 GENETICS & HEREDITY
Genetics Pub Date : 2025-09-03 DOI:10.1093/genetics/iyaf121
Eric Chen, Jessica Schmitt, Graeme McIntosh, Barry P Young, Tianshun Lian, Jie Liu, Kexin K Chen, J Beatrice Liston, Lily MacDonald, Bill Wang, Sonia Medina Giro, Benjamin Boehme, Mriga Das, Seevasant Indran, Jesse T Chao, Sanja Rogic, Paul Pavlidis, Douglas W Allan, Christopher J R Loewen
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Pathogenic variants in MECP2 commonly lead to Rett syndrome, where MECP2's function as a DNA cytosine methylation reader is believed critical. MECP2 variants are also cataloged in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), including nine missense variants which had no known clinical significance at the start of this study. To assess these nine variants as risk alleles for ASD, we developed MECP2 variant functional assays using budding yeast and Drosophila. We calibrated these assays with known pathogenic and benign variants. Our data predict that four ASD variants are loss of function and five are functional. Protein destabilization offers insight into the altered function of some of these variants. Notably, yeast and Drosophila lack DNA methylation, yet all Rett pathogenic and ASD variants located in the methyl DNA-binding domain that we analyzed proved to be loss of function, suggesting a clinically relevant role for non-methyl DNA-binding by MECP2.

利用酵母和果蝇揭示自闭症谱系障碍个体功能改变的MECP2突变。
MECP2的致病性变异通常导致Rett综合征,其中MECP2作为DNA胞嘧啶甲基化解读器的功能被认为是至关重要的。MECP2变异也在自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)患者中被分类,包括9个在本研究开始时没有已知临床意义的错义变异。为了评估这9种变异作为ASD的风险等位基因,我们利用出芽酵母和果蝇进行了MECP2变异功能分析。我们用已知的致病和良性变异来校准这些测定。我们的数据预测,四种ASD变体是功能丧失,五种是功能性的。蛋白质不稳定提供了对这些变异中某些功能改变的见解。值得注意的是,酵母和果蝇缺乏DNA甲基化,但我们分析的所有位于甲基DNA结合域的Rett致病性和ASD变体都证明了功能丧失,这表明MECP2与非甲基DNA结合具有临床相关作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Genetics
Genetics GENETICS & HEREDITY-
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
6.10%
发文量
177
审稿时长
1.5 months
期刊介绍: GENETICS is published by the Genetics Society of America, a scholarly society that seeks to deepen our understanding of the living world by advancing our understanding of genetics. Since 1916, GENETICS has published high-quality, original research presenting novel findings bearing on genetics and genomics. The journal publishes empirical studies of organisms ranging from microbes to humans, as well as theoretical work. While it has an illustrious history, GENETICS has changed along with the communities it serves: it is not your mentor''s journal. The editors make decisions quickly – in around 30 days – without sacrificing the excellence and scholarship for which the journal has long been known. GENETICS is a peer reviewed, peer-edited journal, with an international reach and increasing visibility and impact. All editorial decisions are made through collaboration of at least two editors who are practicing scientists. GENETICS is constantly innovating: expanded types of content include Reviews, Commentary (current issues of interest to geneticists), Perspectives (historical), Primers (to introduce primary literature into the classroom), Toolbox Reviews, plus YeastBook, FlyBook, and WormBook (coming spring 2016). For particularly time-sensitive results, we publish Communications. As part of our mission to serve our communities, we''ve published thematic collections, including Genomic Selection, Multiparental Populations, Mouse Collaborative Cross, and the Genetics of Sex.
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