4.4 Article

In Vivo Functional Study of Disease-associated Rare Human Variants Using Drosophila

Journal

JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
Volume -, Issue 150, Pages -

Publisher

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/59658

Keywords

Genetics; Issue 150; human genetics and genomics; Mendelian diseases; rare and undiagnosed diseases; Undiagnosed Diseases Network; Drosophila melanogaster; variant of unknown significance; VUS; gene of uncertain significance; GUS; functional genomics; transgenic flies; UAS/GAL4 system; T2A-GAL4; electroretinogram; ERG

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [U54 NS093793]
  2. NIH [CNCDP-K12, R01 DC014932, U54HD083092]
  3. NIH[NINDS] [1K12 NS098482]
  4. American Academy of Neurology (Neuroscience Research grant)
  5. Burroughs Wellcome Fund
  6. Child Neurology Society and Child Neurology Foundation (PERF Elterman grant)
  7. NIH Director's Early Independence Award [DP5 OD026426]
  8. Simons Foundation (SFARI Award) [368479]
  9. Alzheimer's Association (New Investigator Research Grant) [15-364099]
  10. Naman Family Fund for Basic Research
  11. Caroline Wiess Law Fund for Research in Molecular Medicine

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Advances in sequencing technology have made whole-genome and whole-exome datasets more accessible for both clinical diagnosis and cutting-edge human genetics research. Although a number of in silico algorithms have been developed to predict the pathogenicity of variants identified in these datasets, functional studies are critical to determining how specific genomic variants affect protein function, especially for missense variants. In the Undiagnosed Diseases Network (UDN) and other rare disease research consortia, model organisms (MO) including Drosophila, C. elegans, zebrafish, and mice are actively used to assess the function of putative human disease-causing variants. This protocol describes a method for the functional assessment of rare human variants used in the Model Organisms Screening Center Drosophila Core of the UDN. The workflow begins with gathering human and MO information from multiple public databases, using the MARRVEL web resource to assess whether the variant is likely to contribute to a patient's condition as well as design effective experiments based on available knowledge and resources. Next, genetic tools (e.g., T2A-GAL4 and UAS-human cDNA lines) are generated to assess the functions of variants of interest in Drosophila. Upon development of these reagents, two-pronged functional assays based on rescue and overexpression experiments can be performed to assess variant function. In the rescue branch, the endogenous fly genes are humanized by replacing the orthologous Drosophila gene with reference or variant human transgenes. In the overexpression branch, the reference and variant human proteins are exogenously driven in a variety of tissues. In both cases, any scorable phenotype (e.g., lethality, eye morphology, electrophysiology) can be used as a read-out, irrespective of the disease of interest. Differences observed between reference and variant alleles suggest a variant-specific effect, and thus likely pathogenicity. This protocol allows rapid, in vivo assessments of putative human disease-causing variants of genes with known and unknown functions.

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