학술논문

Bi-allelic variants in OGDHL cause a neurodevelopmental spectrum disease featuring epilepsy, hearing loss, visual impairment, and ataxia
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Human Genetics. 108(12)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Genetics
Clinical Research
Brain Disorders
Neurosciences
Neurodegenerative
Rare Diseases
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Neurological
Alleles
Animals
Ataxia
Cells
Cultured
Child
Cohort Studies
DNA Mutational Analysis
Drosophila melanogaster
Epilepsy
Family Health
Female
Fibroblasts
Hearing Loss
Humans
Ketoglutarate Dehydrogenase Complex
Male
Mutation
Neurodevelopmental Disorders
RNA Splicing
Vision Disorders
SYNaPS Study Group
University of Washington Center for Mendelian Genomics
CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing
DEE
Drosophila
OGDHL
bi-allelic
developmental and epileptic encephalopathy
exome sequencing
mitochondria
neurodevelopmental disease
α-ketoglutarate
Medical and Health Sciences
Genetics & Heredity
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
The 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase-like (OGDHL) protein is a rate-limiting enzyme in the Krebs cycle that plays a pivotal role in mitochondrial metabolism. OGDHL expression is restricted mainly to the brain in humans. Here, we report nine individuals from eight unrelated families carrying bi-allelic variants in OGDHL with a range of neurological and neurodevelopmental phenotypes including epilepsy, hearing loss, visual impairment, gait ataxia, microcephaly, and hypoplastic corpus callosum. The variants include three homozygous missense variants (p.Pro852Ala, p.Arg244Trp, and p.Arg299Gly), three compound heterozygous single-nucleotide variants (p.Arg673Gln/p.Val488Val, p.Phe734Ser/p.Ala327Val, and p.Trp220Cys/p.Asp491Val), one homozygous frameshift variant (p.Cys553Leufs∗16), and one homozygous stop-gain variant (p.Arg440Ter). To support the pathogenicity of the variants, we developed a novel CRISPR-Cas9-mediated tissue-specific knockout with cDNA rescue system for dOgdh, the Drosophila ortholog of human OGDHL. Pan-neuronal knockout of dOgdh led to developmental lethality as well as defects in Krebs cycle metabolism, which was fully rescued by expression of wild-type dOgdh. Studies using the Drosophila system indicate that p.Arg673Gln, p.Phe734Ser, and p.Arg299Gly are severe loss-of-function alleles, leading to developmental lethality, whereas p.Pro852Ala, p.Ala327Val, p.Trp220Cys, p.Asp491Val, and p.Arg244Trp are hypomorphic alleles, causing behavioral defects. Transcript analysis from fibroblasts obtained from the individual carrying the synonymous variant (c.1464T>C [p.Val488Val]) in family 2 showed that the synonymous variant affects splicing of exon 11 in OGDHL. Human neuronal cells with OGDHL knockout exhibited defects in mitochondrial respiration, indicating the essential role of OGDHL in mitochondrial metabolism in humans. Together, our data establish that the bi-allelic variants in OGDHL are pathogenic, leading to a Mendelian neurodevelopmental disease in humans.