4.1 Article

INPP4A-related genetic and phenotypic spectrum and functional relevance of subcellular targeting of INPP4A isoforms

Journal

NEUROGENETICS
Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages 79-93

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10048-023-00709-9

Keywords

Phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate; Pontocerebellar hypoplasia; Alternative splicing; Vesicular traffic; Endocytosis

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Type I inositol polyphosphate-4-phosphatase (INPP4A) controls cell proliferation, apoptosis, and endosome function. Mutations in INPP4A can cause neurodevelopmental disorders. We report a girl with a novel homozygous INPP4A variant and determine the subcellular distributions of different INPP4A isoforms. Our data suggests the important function of INPP4A isoforms in the brain.
Type I inositol polyphosphate-4-phosphatase (INPP4A) belongs to the group of phosphoinositide phosphatases controlling proliferation, apoptosis, and endosome function by hydrolyzing phosphatidylinositol 3,4-bisphosphate. INPP4A produces multiple transcripts encoding shorter and longer INPP4A isoforms with hydrophilic or hydrophobic C-terminus. Biallelic INPP4A truncating variants cause a spectrum of neurodevelopmental disorders ranging from moderate intellectual disability to postnatal microcephaly with developmental and epileptic encephalopathy and (ponto)cerebellar hypoplasia. We report a girl with the novel homozygous INPP4A variant NM_001134224.2:c.2840del/p.(Gly947Glufs*12) (isoform d). She presented with postnatal microcephaly, global developmental delay, visual impairment, myoclonic seizures, and pontocerebellar hypoplasia and died at the age of 27 months. The level of mutant INPP4A mRNAs in proband-derived leukocytes was comparable to controls suggesting production of C-terminally altered INPP4A isoforms. We transiently expressed eGFP-tagged INPP4A isoform a (NM_004027.3) wildtype and p.(Gly908Glufs*12) mutant [p.(Gly947Glufs*12) according to NM_001134224.2] as well as INPP4A isoform b (NM_001566.2) wildtype and p.(Asp915Alafs*2) mutant, previously reported in family members with moderate intellectual disability, in HeLa cells and determined their subcellular distributions. While INPP4A isoform a was preferentially found in perinuclear clusters co-localizing with the GTPase Rab5, isoform b showed a net-like distribution, possibly localizing near and/or on microtubules. Quantification of intracellular localization patterns of the two INPP4A mutants revealed significant differences compared with the respective wildtype and similarity with each other. Our data suggests an important non-redundant function of INPP4A isoforms with hydrophobic or hydrophilic C-terminus in the brain.

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