FB2026_01 , released March 12, 2026
FB2026_01 , released March 12, 2026
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Citation
Mok, J.W., Mackay, L., Blazo, M., Mizerik, E., Gecz, J., Carroll, R., Nizon, M., Rondeau, S., Joubert, M., Cuinat, S., Deb, W., Valle Sirias, F., Weisz-Hubshman, M., Ketkar, S., Polak, U., Tran, A.A., Kearney, D., Hanchard, N.A., Kanca, O., Wangler, M.F., Bellen, H.J., Lee, B.H., Baylor College of Medicine Center for Precision Medicine Models, , Yamamoto, S., Machol, K. (2025). C-terminal frameshift variants in GPKOW are associated with a multisystemic X-linked disorder.  Genet Med 27(7): 101429.
FlyBase ID
FBrf0262832
Publication Type
Research paper
Abstract
GPKOW, a gene on the X-chromosome, encodes a nuclear RNA-binding protein important in messenger RNA (mRNA) processing as a spliceosome subunit. This work aims to establish GPKOW as a disease-associated gene. We describe 3 males from 2 unrelated families with hemizygous frameshift variants affecting the last exon of GPKOW p.(Arg441SerfsTer30) and p.(Ser444GlufsTer28). The effect of p.(Ser444GlufsTer28) on gene expression was evaluated in patient's fibroblasts. In vivo studies in Drosophila melanogaster targeting the sole GPKOW fly ortholog, CG10324 (Gpkow) were performed. Clinical presentations included intrauterine growth restriction, microcephaly/microencephaly, and eye, brain, skin, and skeletal abnormalities. Heterozygote females presented with short stature, microcephaly, and vision problems. Sequencing of fibroblasts' mRNA confirmed that GPKOW mRNA escapes nonsense-mediated decay. Yet, reduced protein levels suggested protein instability. Studies in Drosophila showed that Gpkow is essential and broadly expressed. It is enriched in neurons and glia in eyes and head of developing and adult flies. Knockdown and overexpression of Gpkow in the fly eye cause eyeless/headless phenotype, suggesting that the gene is dosage sensitive. Importantly, overexpression of the p.(Ser444GlufsTer28) variant caused milder defects than the reference allele, indicating that the truncated protein behaves as a partial loss-of-function allele. Rare variants in GPKOW cause a multisystemic X-linked syndrome.
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
PMC12435177 (PMC) (EuropePMC)
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    Language of Publication
    English
    Additional Languages of Abstract
    Parent Publication
    Publication Type
    Journal
    Abbreviation
    Genet Med
    Title
    Genetics in medicine
    ISBN/ISSN
    1098-3600 1530-0366
    Data From Reference