Compound heterozygosity for loss-of-function GARS variants results in a multisystem developmental syndrome that includes severe growth retardation.
Stephanie N OprescuXenia Chepa-LotreaRyuichi TakaseGretchen GolasThomas C MarkelloDavid R AdamsCamilo ToroAndrea L GropmanYa-Ming HouMay Christine V MalicdanWilliam A GahlCynthia J TifftAnthony AntonellisPublished in: Human mutation (2017)
Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (ARSs) are ubiquitously expressed enzymes that ligate amino acids onto tRNA molecules. Genes encoding ARSs have been implicated in myriad dominant and recessive disease phenotypes. Glycyl-tRNA synthetase (GARS) is a bifunctional ARS that charges tRNAGly in the cytoplasm and mitochondria. GARS variants have been associated with dominant Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease but have not been convincingly implicated in recessive phenotypes. Here, we describe a patient from the NIH Undiagnosed Diseases Program with a multisystem, developmental phenotype. Whole-exome sequence analysis revealed that the patient is compound heterozygous for one frameshift (p.Glu83Ilefs*6) and one missense (p.Arg310Gln) GARS variant. Using in vitro and in vivo functional studies, we show that both GARS variants cause a loss-of-function effect: the frameshift variant results in depleted protein levels and the missense variant reduces GARS tRNA charging activity. In support of GARS variant pathogenicity, our patient shows striking phenotypic overlap with other patients having ARS-related recessive diseases, including features associated with variants in both cytoplasmic and mitochondrial ARSs; this observation is consistent with the essential function of GARS in both cellular locations. In summary, our clinical, genetic, and functional analyses expand the phenotypic spectrum associated with GARS variants.
Keyphrases
- copy number
- intellectual disability
- case report
- amino acid
- early onset
- oxidative stress
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- muscular dystrophy
- cell death
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- single cell
- staphylococcus aureus
- small molecule
- reactive oxygen species
- quality improvement
- biofilm formation
- case control
- duchenne muscular dystrophy