Sylvia Varland, Kirsten Marie Brønstad, Stephanie J. Skinner, Thomas Arnesen

A nonsense variant in the N‐terminal acetyltransferase NAA30 may be associated with global developmental delay and tracheal cleft

  • Genetics (clinical)
  • Genetics

AbstractMost human proteins are N‐terminally acetylated by N‐terminal acetyltransferases (NATs), which play crucial roles in many cellular functions. The NatC complex, comprising the catalytic subunit NAA30 and the auxiliary subunits NAA35 and NAA38, is estimated to acetylate up to 20% of the human proteome in a co‐translational manner. Several NAT enzymes have been linked to rare genetic diseases, causing developmental delay, intellectual disability, and heart disease. Here, we report a de novo heterozygous NAA30 nonsense variant c.244C>T (p.Q82*) (NM_001011713.2), which was identified by whole exome sequencing in a 5‐year‐old boy presenting with global development delay, autism spectrum disorder, hypotonia, tracheal cleft, and recurrent respiratory infections. Biochemical studies were performed to assess the functional impact of the premature stop codon on NAA30's catalytic activity. We find that NAA30‐Q82* completely disrupts the N‐terminal acetyltransferase activity toward a classical NatC substrate using an in vitro acetylation assay. This finding corresponds with structural modeling showing that the truncated NAA30 variant lacks the entire GNAT domain, which is required for catalytic activity. This study suggests that defective NatC‐mediated N‐terminal acetylation can cause disease, thus expanding the spectrum of NAT variants linked to genetic disease.

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