R516Q mutation in Melanoma differentiation-associated protein 5 (MDA5) and its pathogenic role towards rare Singleton-Merten syndrome; a signature associated molecular dynamics study.
Pathogenic variants in IFIH1 have previously been associated with the classic Singleton-Merten syndrome, while variants in DDX58 has been described in association with a milder phenotype, which is suggested to have a better prognosis.
These data confirm the pathogenicity of IFIH1 c.2465G>A p.(Arg822Gln) for Singleton-Merten syndrome and affirm the striking phenotypic heterogeneity of this disorder.
Our data indicate that both Singleton-Merten syndrome and neuroinflammation described in the context of MDA-5 gain-of-function constitute part of the same type I interferonopathy disease spectrum, and provide possible novel insight into the pathology of Jaccoud's arthropathy.
More recently, mutations in IFIH1 were reported in a variety of neuroimmunological phenotypes, including Aicardi-Goutières syndrome, while a specific Arg822Gln mutation in IFIH1 was described in 3 discrete families with Singleton-Merten syndrome (SMS).
Within recent years, with the help of next generation sequencing techniques in syndromic families, mutations in the genes encoding for RIG-I and MDA5 have been identified to cause rare diseases including Aicardi-Goutières syndrome, Systemic Lupus Erythematosus in certain individuals as well as classic and atypical Singleton-Merten syndrome.
Our results further extend the phenotypic spectrum associated with mutations in IFIH1, indicating that the disease can be confined predominantly to the skin, while also highlighting phenotypic overlap with both Aicardi-Goutières syndrome and Singleton-Merten syndrome.