CIAO1 and MMS19 deficiency: a lethal neurodegenerative phenotype caused by cytosolic Fe-S cluster protein assembly disorders

Open Access
Authors
  • C.D.M. van Karnebeek
  • M. Tarailo-Graovac
  • R. Leen
  • R. Meinsma
  • S. Correard
  • J. Jansen-Meijer
  • S.V. Prykhozhij
  • I.A. Pena
  • K. Ban
  • S. Schock
  • V. Saxena
  • M.L. Pras-Raves
  • B.I. Drögemöller
  • A.E. Grootemaat
  • N.N. van der Wel
  • D. Dobritzsch
  • W. Roseboom
  • B.V. Schomakers
  • Y.R.J. Jaspers
  • L. Zoetekouw
  • J. Roelofsen
  • C.R. Ferreira
  • R. van der Lee
  • C.J. Ross
  • J. Kochan
  • R.L. McIntyre
  • J.B. van Klinken
  • M. van Weeghel
  • G. Kramer ORCID logo
  • B. Weschke
  • P. Labrune
  • M.A. Willemsen
  • D. Riva
  • B. Garavaglia
  • J.B. Moeschler
  • J.J. Filiano
  • M. Ekker
  • J.N. Berman
  • D. Dyment
  • F.M. Vaz
  • W.W. Wassermann
  • R.H. Houtkooper
  • A.B.P. van Kuilenburg
Publication date 06-2024
Journal Genetics in Medicine
Article number 101104
Volume | Issue number 26 | 6
Number of pages 13
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences (SILS)
Abstract
Purpose: The functionality of many cellular proteins depends on cofactors; yet, they have only been implicated in a minority of Mendelian diseases. Here, we describe the first 2 inherited disorders of the cytosolic iron-sulfur protein assembly system.
Methods: Genetic testing via genome sequencing was applied to identify the underlying disease cause in 3 patients with microcephaly, congenital brain malformations, progressive developmental and neurologic impairments, recurrent infections, and a fatal outcome. Studies in patient-derived skin fibroblasts and zebrafish models were performed to investigate the biochemical and cellular consequences.
Results: Metabolic analysis showed elevated uracil and thymine levels in body fluids but no pathogenic variants in DPYD, encoding dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase. Genome sequencing identified compound heterozygosity in 2 patients for missense variants in CIAO1, encoding cytosolic iron-sulfur assembly component 1, and homozygosity for an in-frame 3-nucleotide deletion in MMS19, encoding the MMS19 homolog, cytosolic iron-sulfur assembly component, in the third patient. Profound alterations in the proteome, metabolome, and lipidome were observed in patient-derived fibroblasts. We confirmed the detrimental effect of deficiencies in CIAO1 and MMS19 in zebrafish models.
Conclusion: A general failure of cytosolic and nuclear iron-sulfur protein maturation caused pleiotropic effects. The critical function of the cytosolic iron-sulfur protein assembly machinery for antiviral host defense may well explain the recurrent severe infections occurring in our patients.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gim.2024.101104
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CIAO1 and MMS19 deficiency (Final published version)
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