AI Article Synopsis

  • Deletion and truncation mutations in the X-linked CASK gene lead to severe intellectual disability and other neurological issues in girls, believed to impact the CASK-Tbr-1 interaction, although this hasn't been directly tested.
  • Researchers identified three girls with heterozygous missense mutations (M519T and G659D) in CASK showing significant neurological symptoms, indicating that these mutations may disrupt crucial protein interactions.
  • The findings suggest that the impairment of the CASK-neurexin interaction, rather than the CASK-Tbr-1 interaction, is responsible for the observed neurological conditions, highlighting the need for thorough validation of genetic variants.

Article Abstract

Deletion and truncation mutations in the X-linked gene CASK are associated with severe intellectual disability (ID), microcephaly and pontine and cerebellar hypoplasia in girls (MICPCH). The molecular origin of CASK-linked MICPCH is presumed to be due to disruption of the CASK-Tbr-1 interaction. This hypothesis, however, has not been directly tested. Missense variants in CASK are typically asymptomatic in girls. We report three severely affected girls with heterozygous CASK missense mutations (M519T (2), G659D (1)) who exhibit ID, microcephaly, and hindbrain hypoplasia. The mutation M519T results in the replacement of an evolutionarily invariant methionine located in the PDZ signaling domain known to be critical for the CASK-neurexin interaction. CASK is incapable of binding to neurexin, suggesting a critically important role for the CASK-neurexin interaction. The mutation G659D is in the SH3 (Src homology 3) domain of CASK, replacing a semi-conserved glycine with aspartate. We demonstrate that the CASK mutation affects the CASK protein in two independent ways: (1) it increases the protein's propensity to aggregate; and (2) it disrupts the interface between CASK's PDZ (PSD95, Dlg, ZO-1) and SH3 domains, inhibiting the CASK-neurexin interaction despite residing outside of the domain deemed critical for neurexin interaction. Since heterozygosity of other aggregation-inducing mutations (e.g., CASK) does not produce MICPCH, we suggest that the G659D mutation produces microcephaly by disrupting the CASK-neurexin interaction. Our results suggest that disruption of the CASK-neurexin interaction, not the CASK-Tbr-1 interaction, produces microcephaly and cerebellar hypoplasia. These findings underscore the importance of functional validation for variant classification.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6391276PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00439-018-1874-3DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Deletion and truncation mutations in the X-linked CASK gene lead to severe intellectual disability and other neurological issues in girls, believed to impact the CASK-Tbr-1 interaction, although this hasn't been directly tested.
  • Researchers identified three girls with heterozygous missense mutations (M519T and G659D) in CASK showing significant neurological symptoms, indicating that these mutations may disrupt crucial protein interactions.
  • The findings suggest that the impairment of the CASK-neurexin interaction, rather than the CASK-Tbr-1 interaction, is responsible for the observed neurological conditions, highlighting the need for thorough validation of genetic variants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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