Abstract

DIAPH1 encodes human DIA1, a formin protein that elongates unbranched actin. The c.3634+1G>T DIAPH1 mutation causes autosomal dominant nonsyndromic sensorineural hearing loss, DFNA1, characterized by progressive deafness starting in childhood. The mutation occurs near the C‐terminus of the diaphanous autoregulatory domain (DAD) of DIA1, which interacts with its N‐terminal diaphanous inhibitory domain (DID), and may engender constitutive activation of DIA1. However, the underlying pathogenesis that causes DFNA1 is unclear. We describe a novel patient‐derived DIAPH1 mutation (c.3610C>T) in two unrelated families, which results in early termination prior to a basic amino acid motif (RRKR 1204–1207) at the DAD C‐terminus. The mutant DIA1(R1204X) disrupted the autoinhibitory DID‐DAD interaction and was constitutively active. This unscheduled activity caused increased rates of directional actin polymerization movement and induced formation of elongated microvilli. Mice expressing FLAG‐tagged DIA1(R1204X) experienced progressive deafness and hair cell loss at the basal turn and had various morphological abnormalities in stereocilia (short, fused, elongated, sparse). Thus, the basic region of the DAD mediates DIA1 autoinhibition; disruption of the DID‐DAD interaction and consequent activation of DIA1(R1204X) causes DFNA1.

Highlights

  • DIAPH1 encodes human DIA1, a formin protein that elongates unbranched actin

  • We identified a novel DIAPH1 point mutation (c.3610C>T) generating the DIA1(R1204X) mutant, which has an early translation termination site just before four sequential basic amino acids (RRKR1204–1207) in the C-terminal end of the diaphanous autoregulatory domain (DAD) (Fig 1A and B)

  • We report a novel DIAPH1 mutation that generates a mildly active DIA1(R1204X) mutant due to the disrupted autoinhibitory intramolecular diaphanous inhibitory domain (DID)-DAD interaction of DIA1; we show that expression of this mutant in vivo is responsible for progressive deafness

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Summary

Introduction

DIAPH1 encodes human DIA1, a formin protein that elongates unbranched actin. The c.3634+1G>T DIAPH1 mutation causes autosomal dominant nonsyndromic sensorineural hearing loss, DFNA1, characterized by progressive deafness starting in childhood. The mutation occurs near the C-terminus of the diaphanous autoregulatory domain (DAD) of DIA1, which interacts with its. N-terminal diaphanous inhibitory domain (DID), and may engender constitutive activation of DIA1. The underlying pathogenesis that causes DFNA1 is unclear. We describe a novel patientderived DIAPH1 mutation (c.3610C>T) in two unrelated families, which results in early termination prior to a basic amino acid motif (RRKR1204–1207) at the DAD C-terminus.

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