Genes (Oct 2021)

Disruptive <i>NADSYN1</i> Variants Implicated in Congenital Vertebral Malformations

  • Jiachen Lin,
  • Lina Zhao,
  • Sen Zhao,
  • Shengjie Li,
  • Zhengye Zhao,
  • Zefu Chen,
  • Zhifa Zheng,
  • Jiashen Shao,
  • Yuchen Niu,
  • Xiaoxin Li,
  • Jianguo Terry Zhang,
  • Zhihong Wu,
  • Nan Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes12101615
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
p. 1615

Abstract

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Genetic perturbations in nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide de novo (NAD) synthesis pathway predispose individuals to congenital birth defects. The NADSYN1 encodes the final enzyme in the de novo NAD synthesis pathway and, therefore, plays an important role in NAD metabolism and organ embryogenesis. Biallelic mutations in the NADSYN1 gene have been reported to be causative of congenital organ defects known as VCRL syndrome (Vertebral-Cardiac-Renal-Limb syndrome). Here, we analyzed the genetic variants in NADSYN1 in an exome-sequenced cohort consisting of patients with congenital vertebral malformations (CVMs). A total number of eight variants in NADSYN1, including two truncating variants and six missense variants, were identified in nine unrelated patients. All enrolled patients presented multiple organ defects, with the involvement of either the heart, kidney, limbs, or liver, as well as intraspinal deformities. An in vitro assay using COS-7 cells demonstrated either significantly reduced protein levels or disrupted enzymatic activity of the identified variants. Our findings demonstrated that functional variants in NADSYN1 were involved in the complex genetic etiology of CVMs and provided further evidence for the causative NADSYN1 variants in congenital NAD Deficiency Disorder.

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