Revealing function-altering MECP2 mutations in individuals with autism spectrum disorder using yeast and Drosophila.

Publication date: Jun 23, 2025

Pathogenic variants in MECP2 commonly lead to Rett syndrome, where MECP2’s function as a DNA cytosine methylation reader is believed critical. MECP2 variants are also catalogued in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), including nine missense variants which had no known clinical significance at the start of this study. To assess these nine variants as risk alleles for ASD, we developed MECP2 variant functional assays using budding yeast and Drosophila. We calibrated these assays with known pathogenic and benign variants. Our data predict that four ASD variants are loss of function and five are functional. Protein destabilization offers insight into the altered function of some of these variants. Notably, yeast and Drosophila lack DNA methylation, yet all Rett pathogenic and ASD variants located in the methyl DNA binding domain that we analyzed proved to be loss of function, suggesting a clinically-relevant role for non-methyl DNA-binding by MECP2.

Concepts Keywords
Autism ASD
Budding autism spectrum disorder
Dna budding yeast
Drosophila Drosophila
Yeast genetic interactions
MECP2
Rett syndrome
Sentinel Interaction Mapping
transgenesis
variant prediction
VariCarta

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH autism spectrum disorder
disease MESH Rett syndrome
pathway REACTOME Methylation
disease MESH clinical significance
pathway REACTOME Budding
pathway REACTOME DNA methylation

Original Article

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