Abstract

BackgroundSyntaxin‐binding protein 1, encoded by STXBP1, is highly expressed in the brain and involved in fusing synaptic vesicles with the plasma membrane. Studies have shown that pathogenic loss‐of‐function variants in this gene result in various types of epilepsies, mostly beginning early in life. We were interested to model pathogenic missense variants on the protein structure to investigate the mechanism of pathogenicity and genotype–phenotype correlations.MethodsWe report 11 patients with pathogenic de novo mutations in STXBP1 identified in the first 4293 trios of the Deciphering Developmental Disorder (DDD) study, including six missense variants. We analyzed the structural locations of the pathogenic missense variants from this study and the literature, as well as population missense variants extracted from Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC).ResultsPathogenic variants are significantly more likely to occur at highly conserved locations than population variants, and be buried inside the protein domain. Pathogenic mutations are also more likely to destabilize the domain structure compared with population variants, increasing the proportion of (partially) unfolded domains that are prone to aggregation or degradation. We were unable to detect any genotype–phenotype correlation, but unlike previously reported cases, most of the DDD patients with STXBP1 pathogenic variants did not present with very early‐onset or severe epilepsy and encephalopathy, though all have developmental delay with intellectual disability and most display behavioral problems and suffered seizures in later childhood.ConclusionVariants across STXBP1 that cause loss of function can result in severe intellectual disability with or without seizures, consistent with a haploinsufficiency mechanism. Pathogenic missense mutations act through destabilization of the protein domain, making it prone to aggregation or degradation. The presence or absence of early seizures may reflect ascertainment bias in the literature as well as the broad recruitment strategy of the DDD study.

Highlights

  • Brain function relies on the release of neurotransmitters from chemical synapses, which in turn relies on the rapid and regulated fusion of synaptic vesicles with the plasma membrane

  • Pathogenic variants are significantly more likely to occur at highly conserved locations than population variants, and be buried inside the protein domain

  • Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc

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Summary

Introduction

Brain function relies on the release of neurotransmitters from chemical synapses, which in turn relies on the rapid and regulated fusion of synaptic vesicles with the plasma membrane. Many details about the molecular basis of membrane fusion remain to be established (Rizo and Xu 2015), but it is believed that STXBP1 plays an essential role in synaptic vesicle docking, priming, and fusion (Toonen and Verhage 2007; Su€dhof and Rothman 2009; Carr and Rizo 2010), and is highly expressed in the brain (Uhlen et al 2015). To mediate these different functions, STXBP1 is involved in multiple types of interaction with SNAREs, of which the interaction with syntaxin-1 is the most important. We were interested to model pathogenic missense variants on the protein structure to investigate the mechanism of pathogenicity and genotype–phenotype correlations

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