HGG Advances (Jul 2024)

The severity of MUSK pathogenic variants is predicted by the protein domain they disrupt

  • Benjamin T. Cocanougher,
  • Samuel W. Liu,
  • Ludmila Francescatto,
  • Alexander Behura,
  • Mariele Anneling,
  • David G. Jackson,
  • Kristen L. Deak,
  • Chi D. Hornik,
  • Mai K. ElMallah,
  • Carolyn E. Pizoli,
  • Edward C. Smith,
  • Khoon Ghee Queenie Tan,
  • Marie T. McDonald

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 3
p. 100288

Abstract

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Summary: Biallelic loss-of-function variants in the MUSK gene result in two allelic disorders: (1) congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS; OMIM: 616325), a neuromuscular disorder that has a range of severity from severe neonatal-onset weakness to mild adult-onset weakness, and (2) fetal akinesia deformation sequence (OMIM: 208150), a form of pregnancy loss characterized by severe muscle weakness in the fetus. The MUSK gene codes for muscle-specific kinase (MuSK), a receptor tyrosine kinase involved in the development of the neuromuscular junction. Here, we report a case of neonatal-onset MUSK-related CMS in a patient harboring compound heterozygous deletions in the MUSK gene, including (1) a deletion of exons 2–3 leading to an in-frame MuSK protein lacking the immunoglobulin 1 (Ig1) domain and (2) a deletion of exons 7–11 leading to an out-of-frame, truncated MuSK protein. Individual domains of the MuSK protein have been elucidated structurally; however, a complete MuSK structure generated by machine learning algorithms has clear inaccuracies. We modify a predicted AlphaFold structure and integrate previously reported domain-specific structural data to suggest a MuSK protein that dimerizes in two locations (Ig1 and the transmembrane domain). We analyze known pathogenic variants in MUSK to discover domain-specific genotype-phenotype correlations; variants that lead to a loss of protein expression, disruption of the Ig1 domain, or Dok-7 binding are associated with the most severe phenotypes. A conceptual model is provided to explain the severe phenotypes seen in Ig1 variants and the poor response of our patient to pyridostigmine.

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