Cells (Oct 2023)

Clinical Cases and the Molecular Profiling of a Novel Childhood Encephalopathy-Causing <i>GNAO1</i> Mutation P170R

  • Yonika A. Larasati,
  • Gonzalo P. Solis,
  • Alexey Koval,
  • Silja T. Griffiths,
  • Ragnhild Berentsen,
  • Ingvild Aukrust,
  • Gaetan Lesca,
  • Nicolas Chatron,
  • Dorothée Ville,
  • Christian M. Korff,
  • Vladimir L. Katanaev

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells12202469
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 20
p. 2469

Abstract

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De novo mutations in GNAO1, the gene encoding the major neuronal G protein Gαo, cause a spectrum of pediatric encephalopathies with seizures, motor dysfunction, and developmental delay. Of the >80 distinct missense pathogenic variants, many appear to uniformly destabilize the guanine nucleotide handling of the mutant protein, speeding up GTP uptake and deactivating GTP hydrolysis. Zinc supplementation emerges as a promising treatment option for this disease, as Zn2+ ions reactivate the GTP hydrolysis on the mutant Gαo and restore cellular interactions for some of the mutants studied earlier. The molecular etiology of GNAO1 encephalopathies needs further elucidation as a prerequisite for the development of efficient therapeutic approaches. In this work, we combine clinical and medical genetics analysis of a novel GNAO1 mutation with an in-depth molecular dissection of the resultant protein variant. We identify two unrelated patients from Norway and France with a previously unknown mutation in GNAO1, c.509C>G that results in the production of the Pro170Arg mutant Gαo, leading to severe developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. Molecular investigations of Pro170Arg identify this mutant as a unique representative of the pathogenic variants. Its 100-fold-accelerated GTP uptake is not accompanied by a loss in GTP hydrolysis; Zn2+ ions induce a previously unseen effect on the mutant, forcing it to lose the bound GTP. Our work combining clinical and molecular analyses discovers a novel, biochemically distinct pathogenic missense variant of GNAO1 laying the ground for personalized treatment development.

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