Clinical and neurogenetic characterisation of autosomal recessive RBL2-associated progressive neurodevelopmental disorder

Abstract

Retinoblastoma (RB) proteins are highly conserved transcriptional regulators that play important roles during development by regulating cell-cycle gene expression. RBL2 dysfunction has been linked to a severe neurodevelopmental disorder. However, to date, clinical features have only been described in six individuals carrying five biallelic predicted loss of function (pLOF) variants. To define the phenotypic effects of RBL2 mutations in detail, we identified and clinically characterized a cohort of 28 patients from 18 families carrying LOF variants in RBL2, including fourteen new variants that substantially broaden the molecular spectrum. The clinical presentation of affected individuals is characterized by a range of neurological and developmental abnormalities. Global developmental delay and intellectual disability were uniformly observed, ranging from moderate to profound and involving lack of acquisition of key motor and speech milestones in most patients. Frequent features included postnatal microcephaly, infantile hypotonia, aggressive behaviour, stereotypic movements and non-specific dysmorphic features. Common neuroimaging features were cerebral atrophy, white matter volume loss, corpus callosum hypoplasia and cerebellar atrophy. In parallel, we used the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, to investigate how disruption of the conserved RBL2 orthologueue Rbf impacts nervous system function and development. We found that Drosophila Rbf LOF mutants recapitulate several features of patients harboring RBL2 variants, including alterations in the head and brain morphology reminiscent of microcephaly, and perturbed locomotor behaviour. Surprisingly, in addition to its known role in controlling tissue growth during development, we find that continued Rbf expression is also required in fully differentiated post-mitotic neurons for normal locomotion in Drosophila, and that adult-stage neuronal re-expression of Rbf is sufficient to rescue Rbf mutant locomotor defects. Taken together, this study provides a clinical and experimental basis to understand genotype-phenotype correlations in an RBL2-linked neurodevelopmental disorder and suggests that restoring RBL2 expression through gene therapy approaches may ameliorate aspects of RBL2 LOF patient symptoms.

Competing Interest Statement

C.B. is an employee of Centogene. G.H.S is an employee of 3billion. L.M. has received personal fees for ad hoc consultancy from Mendelian Ltd, a rare disease digital healthcare company. The remaining authors report no competing interests.

Funding Statement

This study was supported by the Wellcome Trust (WT093205MA and WT104033AIA to H.H.), Medical Research Council (H.H.), European Community Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013, under grant agreement No. 2012-305121 to H.H.), the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), University College London Hospitals, Biomedical Research Centre, and Fidelity Foundation. This work was also funded by MRC Senior Non-Clinical Fellowship (MR/V03118X/1) to J.E.C.J. WKC was funded by P50HD109879.

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Individuals and/or their legal guardians recruited for this study gave informed consent for their participation. This study received approval from the Review Boards and Bioethics Committees at University College London Hospital (project 06/N076). Permission for inclusion of their anonymized medical data in this cohort, including photographs, was obtained using standard forms at each local site by the responsible referring physicians.

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Data Availability

All data produced in the present study are available upon request to the authors

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