MATR3 pathogenic variants differentially impair its cryptic splicing repression function.
Mashiat KhanXiao Xiao Lily ChenMichelle DiasJhune Rizsan SantosSukhleen KourJustin YouRebekah van BruggenMohieldin M M YoussefYing-Wooi WanZhandong LiuJill A RosenfeldQiumin TanUdai Bhan PandeyHari Krishna YalamanchiliJeehye ParkPublished in: FEBS letters (2024)
Matrin-3 (MATR3) is an RNA-binding protein implicated in neurodegenerative and neurodevelopmental diseases. However, little is known regarding the role of MATR3 in cryptic splicing within the context of functional genes and how disease-associated variants impact this function. We show that loss of MATR3 leads to cryptic exon inclusion in many transcripts. We reveal that ALS-linked S85C pathogenic variant reduces MATR3 solubility but does not impair RNA binding. In parallel, we report a novel neurodevelopmental disease-associated M548T variant, located in the RRM2 domain, which reduces protein solubility and impairs RNA binding and cryptic splicing repression functions of MATR3. Altogether, our research identifies cryptic events within functional genes and demonstrates how disease-associated variants impact MATR3 cryptic splicing repression function.