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Noonan syndrome‐associated biallelic LZTR1 mutations cause cardiac hypertrophy and vascular malformations in zebrafish
Author(s) -
Nakagama Yu,
Takeda Norihiko,
Ogawa Seishi,
Takeda Hiroyuki,
Furutani Yoshiyuki,
Nakanishi Toshio,
Sato Tatsuyuki,
Hirata Yoichiro,
Oka Akira,
Inuzuka Ryo
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
molecular genetics and genomic medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.765
H-Index - 29
ISSN - 2324-9269
DOI - 10.1002/mgg3.1107
Subject(s) - zebrafish , noonan syndrome , biology , cardiomyopathy , pathology , medicine , genetics , bioinformatics , gene , heart failure
Background Variants in the LZTR1 ( leucine‐zipper‐like transcription regulator 1 ) gene (OMIM #600574) have been reported in recessive Noonan syndrome patients. In vivo evidence from animal models to support its causative role is lacking. Methods By CRISPR‐Cas9 genome editing, we generated lztr1 ‐mutated zebrafish ( Danio rerio ). Analyses of histopathology and downstream signaling were performed to investigate the pathogenesis of cardiac and extracardiac abnormalities in Noonan syndrome. Results A frameshift deletion allele was created in the zebrafish lztr1 . Crosses of heterozygotes obtained homozygous lztr1 null mutants that modeled LZTR1 loss‐of‐function. Histological analyses of the model revealed ventricular hypertrophy, the deleterious signature of Noonan syndrome‐associated cardiomyopathy. Further, assessment for extracardiac abnormalities documented multiple vascular malformations, resembling human vascular pathology caused by RAS/MAPK activation. Due to spatiotemporal regulation of LZTR1 , its downstream function was not fully elucidated from western blots of adult tissue. Conclusion Our novel zebrafish model phenocopied human recessive Noonan syndrome and supported the loss‐of‐function mechanism of disease‐causing LZTR1 variants. The discovery of vascular malformations in mutants calls for the clinical follow‐up of patients to monitor for its emergence. The model will serve as a novel platform for investigating the pathophysiology linking RAS/MAPK signaling to cardiac and vascular pathology.

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