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Clinical, genetic, and functional characterization of the glycine receptor β-subunit A455P variant in a family affected by hyperekplexia syndrome

Hyperekplexia is a rare neurological disorder characterized by exaggerated startle responses affecting newborns with the hallmark characteristics of hypertonia, apnea, and noise or touch-induced nonepileptic seizures. The genetic causes of the disease can vary, and several associated genes and mutat...

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Autores principales: Aboheimed, Ghada I., AlRasheed, Maha M., Almudimeegh, Sultan, Peña-Guerra, Karla A., Cardona-Londoño, Kelly J., Salih, Mustafa A., Seidahmed, Mohammed Z., Al-Mohanna, Futwan, Colak, Dilek, Harvey, Robert J., Harvey, Kirsten, Arold, Stefan T., Kaya, Namik, Ruiz, Arnaud J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9241032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35526563
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2022.102018
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author Aboheimed, Ghada I.
AlRasheed, Maha M.
Almudimeegh, Sultan
Peña-Guerra, Karla A.
Cardona-Londoño, Kelly J.
Salih, Mustafa A.
Seidahmed, Mohammed Z.
Al-Mohanna, Futwan
Colak, Dilek
Harvey, Robert J.
Harvey, Kirsten
Arold, Stefan T.
Kaya, Namik
Ruiz, Arnaud J.
author_facet Aboheimed, Ghada I.
AlRasheed, Maha M.
Almudimeegh, Sultan
Peña-Guerra, Karla A.
Cardona-Londoño, Kelly J.
Salih, Mustafa A.
Seidahmed, Mohammed Z.
Al-Mohanna, Futwan
Colak, Dilek
Harvey, Robert J.
Harvey, Kirsten
Arold, Stefan T.
Kaya, Namik
Ruiz, Arnaud J.
author_sort Aboheimed, Ghada I.
collection PubMed
description Hyperekplexia is a rare neurological disorder characterized by exaggerated startle responses affecting newborns with the hallmark characteristics of hypertonia, apnea, and noise or touch-induced nonepileptic seizures. The genetic causes of the disease can vary, and several associated genes and mutations have been reported to affect glycine receptors (GlyRs); however, the mechanistic links between GlyRs and hyperekplexia are not yet understood. Here, we describe a patient with hyperekplexia from a consanguineous family. Extensive genetic screening using exome sequencing coupled with autozygome analysis and iterative filtering supplemented by in silico prediction identified that the patient carries the homozygous missense mutation A455P in GLRB, which encodes the GlyR β-subunit. To unravel the physiological and molecular effects of A455P on GlyRs, we used electrophysiology in a heterologous system as well as immunocytochemistry, confocal microscopy, and cellular biochemistry. We found a reduction in glycine-evoked currents in N2A cells expressing the mutation compared to WT cells. Western blot analysis also revealed a reduced amount of GlyR β protein both in cell lysates and isolated membrane fractions. In line with the above observations, coimmunoprecipitation assays suggested that the GlyR α(1)-subunit retained coassembly with β(A455P) to form membrane-bound heteromeric receptors. Finally, structural modeling showed that the A455P mutation affected the interaction between the GlyR β-subunit transmembrane domain 4 and the other helices of the subunit. Taken together, our study identifies and validates a novel loss-of-function mutation in GlyRs whose pathogenicity is likely to cause hyperekplexia in the affected individual.
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spelling pubmed-92410322022-07-01 Clinical, genetic, and functional characterization of the glycine receptor β-subunit A455P variant in a family affected by hyperekplexia syndrome Aboheimed, Ghada I. AlRasheed, Maha M. Almudimeegh, Sultan Peña-Guerra, Karla A. Cardona-Londoño, Kelly J. Salih, Mustafa A. Seidahmed, Mohammed Z. Al-Mohanna, Futwan Colak, Dilek Harvey, Robert J. Harvey, Kirsten Arold, Stefan T. Kaya, Namik Ruiz, Arnaud J. J Biol Chem Research Article Hyperekplexia is a rare neurological disorder characterized by exaggerated startle responses affecting newborns with the hallmark characteristics of hypertonia, apnea, and noise or touch-induced nonepileptic seizures. The genetic causes of the disease can vary, and several associated genes and mutations have been reported to affect glycine receptors (GlyRs); however, the mechanistic links between GlyRs and hyperekplexia are not yet understood. Here, we describe a patient with hyperekplexia from a consanguineous family. Extensive genetic screening using exome sequencing coupled with autozygome analysis and iterative filtering supplemented by in silico prediction identified that the patient carries the homozygous missense mutation A455P in GLRB, which encodes the GlyR β-subunit. To unravel the physiological and molecular effects of A455P on GlyRs, we used electrophysiology in a heterologous system as well as immunocytochemistry, confocal microscopy, and cellular biochemistry. We found a reduction in glycine-evoked currents in N2A cells expressing the mutation compared to WT cells. Western blot analysis also revealed a reduced amount of GlyR β protein both in cell lysates and isolated membrane fractions. In line with the above observations, coimmunoprecipitation assays suggested that the GlyR α(1)-subunit retained coassembly with β(A455P) to form membrane-bound heteromeric receptors. Finally, structural modeling showed that the A455P mutation affected the interaction between the GlyR β-subunit transmembrane domain 4 and the other helices of the subunit. Taken together, our study identifies and validates a novel loss-of-function mutation in GlyRs whose pathogenicity is likely to cause hyperekplexia in the affected individual. American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2022-05-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9241032/ /pubmed/35526563 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2022.102018 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Aboheimed, Ghada I.
AlRasheed, Maha M.
Almudimeegh, Sultan
Peña-Guerra, Karla A.
Cardona-Londoño, Kelly J.
Salih, Mustafa A.
Seidahmed, Mohammed Z.
Al-Mohanna, Futwan
Colak, Dilek
Harvey, Robert J.
Harvey, Kirsten
Arold, Stefan T.
Kaya, Namik
Ruiz, Arnaud J.
Clinical, genetic, and functional characterization of the glycine receptor β-subunit A455P variant in a family affected by hyperekplexia syndrome
title Clinical, genetic, and functional characterization of the glycine receptor β-subunit A455P variant in a family affected by hyperekplexia syndrome
title_full Clinical, genetic, and functional characterization of the glycine receptor β-subunit A455P variant in a family affected by hyperekplexia syndrome
title_fullStr Clinical, genetic, and functional characterization of the glycine receptor β-subunit A455P variant in a family affected by hyperekplexia syndrome
title_full_unstemmed Clinical, genetic, and functional characterization of the glycine receptor β-subunit A455P variant in a family affected by hyperekplexia syndrome
title_short Clinical, genetic, and functional characterization of the glycine receptor β-subunit A455P variant in a family affected by hyperekplexia syndrome
title_sort clinical, genetic, and functional characterization of the glycine receptor β-subunit a455p variant in a family affected by hyperekplexia syndrome
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9241032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35526563
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2022.102018
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