4.7 Article

Changes of RAS Pathway Phosphorylation in Lymphoblastoid Cell Lines from Noonan Syndrome Patients Carrying Hypomorphic Variants in Two NS Genes

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms24044035

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Noonan syndrome; RAS pathway genes; hypomorphic variants; additive effect; phosphoproteome; proteome

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Noonan syndrome is a multisystem disorder caused by mutations in RAS pathway genes. In some cases, molecular diagnosis is not possible, suggesting additional unknown genes or mechanisms. A study on two NS patients showed that the presence of subclinical variants from both parents can activate the RAS pathway and potentially contribute to the development of NS.
Noonan syndrome (NS) is an autosomal dominant multisystem disorder, characterized by variable expressivity and locus heterogeneity, being caused by mutations in one of a subset of RAS pathway genes. Nevertheless, for 20-30% of patients it is not possible to provide molecular diagnosis, suggesting that further unknown genes or mechanisms are involved in NS pathogenesis. Recently, we proposed a digenic inheritance of subclinical variants as an alternative NS pathogenic model in two NS patients negative for molecular diagnosis. They showed hypomorphic variants of RAS pathway genes co-inherited from both their healthy parents that we hypothesized to generate an additive effect. Here, we report on the phosphoproteome and proteome analysis by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) performed on the immortalized peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from the two above trios. Our results indicate that the two unrelated patients show overlapped profiles in both protein abundances and their phosphorylation levels not reached by their parents. IPA software predicted RAS-related pathways as significantly activated in the two patients. Interestingly, they remained unchanged or only slightly activated in both patients' parents. These findings suggest that the presence of one subclinical variant can activate the RAS pathway below the pathological threshold, which can instead be exceeded by the additive effect due to the co-presence of two subclinical variants causing NS, supporting our digenic inheritance hypothesis.

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