4.8 Article

Inborn Errors of RNA Lariat Metabolism in Humans with Brainstem Viral Infection

Journal

CELL
Volume 172, Issue 5, Pages 952-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2018.02.019

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health (NIH), Clinical and Translational Science Award program [8UL1TR000043]
  2. NIH [5R21NS084255, 5R01AI088364, 5R01NS072381, T-32 AG021890]
  3. ANR grants HSEIEIER [ANR-10-LABX-62-IBEID]
  4. D.I.M. Pathologies infectieuses humaines [DIM150012]
  5. Starr Foundation Tri-lnstitutional Stem Cell Initiative [2014-005]
  6. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [16H05355]
  7. Japanese Agency for Medical Research and Development
  8. AMED
  9. Rockefeller University
  10. INSERM
  11. Paris Descartes University
  12. St Giles Foundation
  13. EMBO [ALTF 280-2016]
  14. NIH/NIA [R01AG057964-01]
  15. US Department of Veterans Affairs [I01 BX002211-01A2, I01 BX0025801]
  16. William AMP
  17. Ella Owens Medical Research Foundation
  18. NIH
  19. John C. Whitehead Presidential Fellowship
  20. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17K10112, 16H05355, 16K15528] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Viruses that are typically benign sometimes invade the brainstem in otherwise healthy children. We report bi-allelic DBR1 mutations in unrelated patients from different ethnicities, each of whom had brainstem infection due to herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV1), influenza virus, or norovirus. DBR1 encodes the only known RNA lariat debranching enzyme. We show that DBR1 expression is ubiquitous, but strongest in the spinal cord and brainstem. We also show that all DBR1 mutant alleles are severely hypomorphic, in terms of expression and function. The fibroblasts of DBR1-mutated patients contain higher RNA lariat levels than control cells, this difference becoming even more marked during HSV1 infection. Finally, we show that the patients' fibroblasts are highly susceptible to HSV1. RNA lariat accumulation and viral susceptibility are rescued by wild-type DBR1. Autosomal recessive, partial DBR1 deficiency underlies viral infection of the brainstem in humans through the disruption of tissue-specific and cell-intrinsic immunity to viruses.

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