Paradigmatic De Novo GRIN1 Variants Recapitulate Pathophysiological Mechanisms Underlying GRIN1-Related Disorder Clinical Spectrum

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2021-12-01

Authors

Santos-Gomez, Ana
Miguez-Cabello, Federico
Julia-Palacios, Natalia
Garcia-Navas, Deyanira
Soto-Insuga, Victor
Garcia-Penas, Juan J.
Fuentes, Patricia
Ibanez-Mico, Salvador
Cuesta, Laura
Cancho, Ramon

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Mdpi
Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Background: GRIN-related disorders (GRD), the so-called grinpathies, is a group of rare encephalopathies caused by mutations affecting GRIN genes (mostly GRIN1, GRIN2A and GRIN2B genes), which encode for the GluN subunit of the N-methyl D-aspartate (NMDA) type ionotropic glutamate receptors. A growing number of functional studies indicate that GRIN-encoded GluN1 subunit disturbances can be dichotomically classified into gain- and loss-of-function, although intermediate complex scenarios are often present. Methods: In this study, we aimed to delineate the structural and functional alterations of GRIN1 disease-associated variants, and their correlations with clinical symptoms in a Spanish cohort of 15 paediatric encephalopathy patients harbouring these variants. Results: Patients harbouring GRIN1 disease-associated variants have been clinically deeply-phenotyped. Further, using computational and in vitro approaches, we identified different critical checkpoints affecting GluN1 biogenesis (protein stability, subunit assembly and surface trafficking) and/or NMDAR biophysical properties, and their association with GRD clinical symptoms. Conclusions: Our findings show a strong correlation between GRIN1 variants-associated structural and functional outcomes. This structural-functional stratification provides relevant insights of genotype-phenotype association, contributing to future precision medicine of GRIN1-related encephalopathies.

Description

MeSH Terms

DeCS Terms

CIE Terms

Keywords

GRIN-related disorders, glutamatergic neurotransmission, NMDA receptors, neurodevelopmental disorders, Synaptic plasticity, Nmda, Mutations

Citation