A clinical and genotype-phenotype analysis of MACF1 variants
Number of Authors: 902025 (English)In: American Journal of Human Genetics, ISSN 0002-9297, E-ISSN 1537-6605, Vol. 112, no 10, p. 2363-2380Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
Microtubule-actin cross-linking factor 1 (MACF1) is a large protein of the spectraplakin family, which is essential for brain development. MACF1 interacts with microtubules through the growth arrest-specific 2 (Gas2)-related (GAR) domain. Heterozygous MACF1 missense variants affecting the zinc-binding residues in this domain result in a distinctive cortical and brain stem malformation. Evidence for other MACF1-associated disorders is still limited. Here, we present a cohort of 45 individuals with heterozygous or bi-allelic MACF1 variants to explore the phenotypic spectrum and assess possible pathogenic relevance. We observe that de novo heterozygous missense variants in the EF-hand domains also result in distinctive brain malformation and provide experimental evidence that variants in the EF-hand/GAR module increase microtubule binding, suggestive of a toxic gain of function. Notably, no phenotype-genotype correlation was possible for the remaining heterozygous variants in other domains. A clinical review of eight families with bi-allelic variants reveals a possible complex neurodevelopmental syndrome of the central and peripheral nervous systems. In these individuals, bi-allelic variants mostly affect the Plakin domain. Furthermore, RNA sequencing and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) analyses of human fetal brain tissue reveal five MACF1 isoforms with region-specific expression, differing in their exon 1 transcription start sites but splicing to a common exon 2. This differential expression explains the frontal-predominant lissencephaly in an individual with a homozygous stop-gain in exon 1 (MACF1-204: c.70C>T [p.Arg24∗]), as this isoform is preferentially expressed in the frontal cortex. We conclude that MACF1-related disorders are strictly linked to domain function and the level of transcript expression, explaining the observed wide clinical heterogeneity.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Cell Press, 2025. Vol. 112, no 10, p. 2363-2380
Keywords [en]
ACF7, axonal pathfinding, brainstem hypoplasia, lissencephaly, MACF1, microtubules, membrane protein, microtubule actin cross linking factor 1, unclassified drug, agyria, Article, ataxia, autism, binding and related phenomena, brain malformation, chromatin immunoprecipitation, cohort analysis, controlled study, differential gene expression, dystonia, EF hand domain, exon, fetus, GAR domain, genetic variability, genotype, heterozygosity, homozygosity, human, human cell, human tissue, hypoplasia, intellectual impairment, lissencephaly with brain stem hypoplasia, microcephaly, microtubule binding, nuclear magnetic resonance imaging, peripheral neuropathy, phenotype, Plakin domain, protein domain, retrospective study, RNA sequencing, seizure, transcription initiation site, visual impairment
National Category
Medical Genetics and Genomics Neurosciences
Research subject
Translational Medicine TRIM
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:his:diva-25882DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2025.08.010ISI: 001590325500006PubMedID: 40925378Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-105016857716OAI: oai:DiVA.org:his-25882DiVA, id: diva2:2002852
Note
© 2025 American Society of Human Genetics
Correspondence Address: J. Dekker; Department of Clinical Genetics, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, PO Box 2040, 3000 CA, Netherlands; email: j.dekker.1@erasmusmc.nl; CODEN: AJHGA
2025-10-022025-10-022025-10-27Bibliographically approved