USP27X variants underlying X-linked intellectual disability disrupt protein function via distinct mechanisms
Koch, Intisar; Slovik, Maya; Zhang, Yuling; Liu, Bingyu; Rennie, Martin; Konz, Emily; Cogne, Benjamin; Daana, Muhannad; Davids, Laura; Diets, Illja J; Gold, Nina B; Holtz, Alexander M; Isidor, Bertrand; Mor-Shaked, Hagar; Neira Fresneda, Juanita; Niederhoffer, Karen Y; Nizon, Mathilde; Pfundt, Rolph; Simon, Meh; Stegmann, Apa; Guillen Sacoto, Maria J; Wevers, Marijke; Barakat, Tahsin Stefan; Yanovsky-Dagan, Shira; Atanassov, Boyko S; Toth, Rachel; Gao, Chengjiang; Bustos, Francisco; Harel, Tamar
(2024) Life Science Alliance, volume 7, issue 3
(Article)
Abstract
Neurodevelopmental disorders with intellectual disability (ND/ID) are a heterogeneous group of diseases driving lifelong deficits in cognition and behavior with no definitive cure. X-linked intellectual disability disorder 105 (XLID105, #300984; OMIM) is a ND/ID driven by hemizygous variants in the USP27X gene encoding a protein deubiquitylase with a role in
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cell proliferation and neural development. Currently, only four genetically diagnosed individuals from two unrelated families have been described with limited clinical data. Furthermore, the mechanisms underlying the disorder are unknown. Here, we report 10 new XLID105 individuals from nine families and determine the impact of gene variants on USP27X protein function. Using a combination of clinical genetics, bioinformatics, biochemical, and cell biology approaches, we determined that XLID105 variants alter USP27X protein biology via distinct mechanisms including changes in developmentally relevant protein-protein interactions and deubiquitylating activity. Our data better define the phenotypic spectrum of XLID105 and suggest that XLID105 is driven by USP27X functional disruption. Understanding the pathogenic mechanisms of XLID105 variants will provide molecular insight into USP27X biology and may create the potential for therapy development.
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Keywords: Cell Proliferation, Computational Biology, Humans, Intellectual Disability/genetics, Neurogenesis, Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous), Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis, Plant Science, Ecology, Journal Article
ISSN: 2575-1077
Publisher: Life Science Alliance, LLC
Note: Publisher Copyright: © 2024 Koch et al.
(Peer reviewed)