AI Article Synopsis

  • - Pathogenic variants in the MFN2 gene are linked to two types of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT2A2A and CMT2A2B), and this case presents severe brain abnormalities in a fetus due to a specific homozygous deletion in the MFN2 gene.
  • - This deletion leads to skipping of exon 16, which removes crucial protein domains, negatively affecting the function of MFN2, a protein essential for mitochondrial fusion.
  • - Investigations into the fetal fibroblasts revealed disrupted mitochondrial networks and deficiencies in respiratory chain complexes, marking this as the first case documenting severe developmental issues caused by MFN2 deficiency.

Article Abstract

Pathogenic variants in the MFN2 gene are commonly associated with autosomal dominant (CMT2A2A) or recessive (CMT2A2B) Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, with possible involvement of the CNS. Here, we present a case of severe antenatal encephalopathy with lissencephaly, polymicrogyria and cerebellar atrophy. Whole genome analysis revealed a homozygous deletion c.1717-274_1734 del (NM_014874.4) in the MFN2 gene, leading to exon 16 skipping and in-frame loss of 50 amino acids (p.Gln574_Val624del), removing the proline-rich domain and the transmembrane domain 1 (TM1). MFN2 is a transmembrane GTPase located on the mitochondrial outer membrane that contributes to mitochondrial fusion, shaping large mitochondrial networks within cells. In silico modelling showed that the loss of the TM1 domain resulted in a drastically altered topological insertion of the protein in the mitochondrial outer membrane. Fetus fibroblasts, investigated by fluorescent cell imaging, electron microscopy and time-lapse recording, showed a sharp alteration of the mitochondrial network, with clumped mitochondria and clusters of tethered mitochondria unable to fuse. Multiple deficiencies of respiratory chain complexes with severe impairment of complex I were also evidenced in patient fibroblasts, without involvement of mitochondrial DNA instability. This is the first reported case of a severe developmental defect due to MFN2 deficiency with clumped mitochondria.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awad347DOI Listing

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