Destabilizing NF1 variants act in a dominant negative manner through neurofibromin dimerization.

Journal: Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America
Published:
Abstract

The majority of pathogenic mutations in the neurofibromatosis type I (NF1) gene reduce total neurofibromin protein expression through premature truncation or microdeletion, but it is less well understood how loss-of-function missense variants drive NF1 disease. We have found that patient variants in codons 844 to 848, which correlate with a severe phenotype, cause protein instability and exert an additional dominant-negative action whereby wild-type neurofibromin also becomes destabilized through protein dimerization. We have used our neurofibromin cryogenic electron microscopy structure to predict and validate other patient variants that act through a similar mechanism. This provides a foundation for understanding genotype-phenotype correlations and has important implications for patient counseling, disease management, and therapeutics.

Authors
Lucy Young, Ruby Goldstein De Salazar, Sae-won Han, Zi Yi Huang, Alan Merk, Matthew Drew, Joseph Darling, Vanessa Wall, Reinhard Grisshammer, Alice Cheng, Madeline Allison, Matthew Sale, Dwight Nissley, Dominic Esposito, Jana Ognjenovic, Frank Mccormick