ISSN : 2146-3123
E-ISSN : 2146-3131

Marija Gjorgjievska1, Gjorgji Bozhinovski1, Elena Sukarova-Angelovska2, Mirjana Kocova2, Lejla Muaremoska Kanzoska2, Dijana Plaseska-Karanfilska1
1Research Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology “Georgi D. Efremov”, Macedonian Academy of Science and Arts, Skopje, North Macedonia
2Medical Faculty, University Ss. Cyril and Methodius Skopje, University Children’s Hospital, Skopje, North Macedonia
DOI : 10.4274/balkanmedj.galenos.2023.2022-12-28
Pages : 252-261

Abstract

Background: Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is an autosomal dominant neurocutaneous disorder, characterized by multiple café-au-lait macules, axillary and inguinal freckling, tumors of the nervous system, and iris hamartomas. More than 3,100 different pathogenic variants have been reported in the NF1 gene, including missense, nonsense, frameshift, in-frame, splicing, and large deletions.
Aims: To determine the NF1 mutational spectrum in patients with NF1 from the Republic of North Macedonia.
Study Design: A cohort study.
Methods: Molecular analyses included reverse transcription and cDNA sequencing of the NF1 gene and next-generation sequencing using the TruSight Cancer panel, along with the multiple ligation probe amplification method to detect single nucleotide variants and copy number variations. Direct DNA sequencing was also used for the family member analysis.
Results: Our 9-year study of patients suspected of having NF1 in the Republic of North Macedonia encompassed molecular characterization of 30 cases of the disease. We identified 28 unique pathogenic NF1 variants (NM_001042492.3), of which ten were novel: c.208delA; c.341_364del; c.1480_1481delTT; c.2325+1G>C; c.2495_2496dupAC; c.2533_2541del; c.4517delC; c.5844C>G; c.6971delA; c.7605_7606delGAinsAT. In addition to the variant spectrum analysis, our research revealed two positive genotype-phenotype correlations. One between the clinical manifestation of cognitive impairment and gross deletions in the NF1 gene, and the other between cognitive impairment and truncating variants located in the RAS-GAP functional domain.
Conclusion: This is the first study of NF1 patients in the Republic of North Macedonia, and it contributes ten novel variants to the global spectrum of pathogenic NF1 variants. It also corroborates the crucial importance of NF1 genetic testing for a prompt and precise diagnosis, particularly in younger patients.


INTRODUCTION

Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1), also known as Recklinghausen’s disease, is an autosomal dominant neurocutaneous disorder with a prevalence of 1-5 in 10,000 people worldwide.1-3 It is characterized by multiple café-au-lait macules (CALMs), axillary and inguinal freckling, tumors of the nervous system, and iris hamartomas (Lisch nodules). The most common NF1-associated tumors are neurofibromas, which are dermal or plexiform benign peripheral nerve sheath tumors. Although less common, optic glioma, macrocephaly, short stature, cognitive impairment, epilepsy, scoliosis, and certain malignancies can also be present in NF1 patients.4,5

The diagnosis of NF1 is based on the National Institute of Health (NIH) diagnostic criteria, defined at the Consensus Development Conference in 1988. An individual is considered to be NF1 positive  if at least two of the following clinical features are met: six or more café-au-lait macules; axillary or inguinal region freckling; two or more neurofibromas of any type or one plexiform neurofibroma; optic glioma; two or more Lisch nodules; a distinctive osseous lesion, such as sphenoid dysplasia or thinning of a long bone cortex with or without pseudarthrosis, and a first-degree relative (parent, sibling, or offspring) with NF-1 diagnosed from these criteria.6 In addition, the revised NF1 diagnostic criteria (reported in 2021) suggest that if only CALMs and freckling are present, at least one of the two pigmentary findings should be bilateral; sphenoid wing dysplasia is not a separate criterion in the case of an ipsilateral orbital plexiform neurofibroma; the presence of two or more choroidal abnormalities defined as bright, patchy nodules, and the presence of a heterozygous pathogenic NF1 variant is also a diagnostic criterion.5 Although NF1 is a monogenic disorder with complete penetrance after childhood, the phenotype of the disease is extremely variable and varies even within families carrying the same genetic variants.7,8 The reasons for this phenotypic variability are poorly understood, but several contributing factors have been suggested, such as genetic modifiers, epigenetic alterations, or environmental causes.9

The NF1 gene (17q11.2; NM_001042492.3; NP_001035957.1) is one of the longest protein-coding genes in the human genome. It encodes the 2,839 amino acid-long neurofibromin protein, which is produced in many cells, including fibroblasts, nerve cells, and cells surrounding nerve cells (oligodendrocytes and Schwann cells). This protein is a GTPase-activating protein (GAP) that converts the active RAS-GTP into its inactive RAS-GDP form. The RAS-GAP activity of the protein is managed by the GTPase-activating protein-related domain (GRD), which corresponds to amino acids 1,235 and 1,451 of the Nf1 protein. The active form of RAS binds and activates the kinases, which leads to the activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) and cell proliferation. Active neurofibromin downregulates the RAS/MAPK pathway and acts as a tumor suppressor in normal cells. Pathogenic variants of the NF1 gene produce a non-functional protein that cannot regulate cell growth and division, and this, in turn, leads to the production of tumors along the nerves throughout the body (neurofibromas).4,5 However, it remains unclear how variants in the NF1 gene cause the other features of NF1, such as café-au-lait spots.10

Herein, we investigated a cohort of patients suspected of having NF1 from the Republic of North Macedonia. In addition to the variant spectrum analysis, we describe the patients’ phenotype and further investigate possible genotype-phenotype correlations.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

In a period of 9 years (2013-2022), 48 patients suspected of having NF1 were referred to our laboratory for molecular analysis of the NF1 gene. Based on the referred clinical symptoms, 27 of the patients met the NIH diagnostic criteria for NF1 disease, while the remaining 21 had only isolated symptoms from the defined NIH criteria with some additional symptoms that were less specific for NF1 disease (Table 1). All patients underwent genetic testing for NF1. None of the patients’ parents had genetically confirmed NF1 or were previously diagnosed to have NF1 based on their clinical presentations. The patient’s parents were also tested if a pathogenic variant was detected in a patient.

DNA and RNA samples were extracted from peripheral blood from each patient and the available parent. DNA was isolated by Proteinase K/SDS digestion following standard phenol-chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation. Total RNA was extracted from fresh peripheral blood collected in EDTA using TRIzol Reagent (ThermoFisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) following the manufacturer’s protocol. Analysis of the NF1 gene was done using a couple of different methods depending on the period when the patient was referred to our laboratory.

In the early stages of our study, we used reverse transcription and cDNA sequencing of the NF1 gene to diagnose suspected NF1 cases, following a previously described protocol.11 Therefore, the first patients and their family members were diagnosed using cDNA sequencing.

As cDNA sequencing is a time and labor-consuming method, we implemented the next-generation sequencing (NGS) method in 2016 to analyze suspected NF1 cases. In addition, all previous unsolved NF1 cases were reanalyzed using NGS.

The TruSight cancer sequencing panel was used for targeted NGS (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA). This sequencing panel amplified 94 cancer-associated genes, including the NF1 gene. Libraries were prepared according to the manufacturer’s protocol and were sequenced on an Illumina MiSeq desktop sequencer using paired-end 150 bp sequencing reads. The raw sequence data were aligned against the reference genome as specified in the manifest file using MiSeq Reporter software (v2.6.3). The VCF output file was used for variant calling and filtering with Variant Studio software (v3.0 Illumina). The BAM output file was used as an input file in the Integrative Genome Viewer (IGV; https://www.broadinstitute.org/igv/ v2.4.5) to visualize the specific variant and coverage in that region. Coverage of the entire NF1 gene in each patient was verified using the web app gene.iobio (https://gene.iobio.io/) and the BAM file as an input file in the application.

Variants with a global frequency < 1% according to the gnomAD database (https://gnomad.broadinstitute.org/) were thoroughly investigated, particularly truncating variants.12 Their pathogenicity was evaluated based on the worldwide accepted guidelines of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG), the Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP), and the Association for Clinical Genomic Science (ACGS).13-16

Despite the NF1 gene analysis, patients who were analyzed using the TruSight Cancer panel were also screened for pathogenic, likely pathogenic, or “hot” VUS variants in the other cancer-associated genes covered by the panel.

In addition to the sequencing methods, the multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) method and the P081, P082, and P122 probe mixes were used to detect copy number variations, according to the manufacturer’s protocol. Data analysis was performed using Coffalyser NET software (MRC-Amsterdam, The Netherlands).

We used direct DNA sequencing or cDNA sequencing of a specific region in the NF1 gene to analyze family members. The primers used for direct DNA sequencing were designed in-house using the Primer3Plus tool (www.bioinformatics.nl/cgi-bin/primer3plus/primer3plus.cgi) and their sequences are shown in Supplementary Material Table S1.

We used a 2 x 2 contingency table, Fisher’s exact one-tailed test, and an available online tool from GraphPad (www.graphpad.com/quickcalcs/contingency1/) to statistically analyze the small group of patients with a learning/intellectual disability.

RESULTS

We detected 28 unique pathogenic variants among the 30 NF1 pathogenic variant-positive patients. Six of the positive patients were some of the patients who did not meet the NIH diagnostic criteria based on their presenting symptoms. We diagnosed these patients as positive for NF1 disease based on detecting the pathogenic NF1 variant. However, our analysis did not reveal a pathogenic NF1 variant among these three patients that met the NIH diagnostic criteria for the disease (Table 1, Table 2). The analysis of the patients with available parents showed that 44% (11/25) of the detected variants were inherited from an affected parent, while 56% (14/25) of the variants had occurred de novo. No pathogenicity, likely pathogenic, or “hot” VUS variant was detected in the other cancer-associated genes covered by the TruSight Cancer panel.

The unique NF1 variants accounted for 11 non-sense variants, six frameshift variants, six splicing variants, one missense variant, two in-frame variants, and two gross deletions. The gross deletions were present as one multi-exon deletion of ~0.15 Mb, and one ~1.4 Mb deletion of the entire NF1 gene and its surrounding genes. The splicing variants consisted of one missense and four intronic variants causing aberrations in the splicing and premature termination of the protein, and one intronic variant that caused an in-frame deletion of 58 amino acids in the protein. The 1.4 Mb deletion and the c.3916C>T; p.(Arg1306Ter) variant were not unique; both were detected in two patients each. None of the detected NF1 variants was present in the Macedonian population consisting of 500 clinical exomes, which served as the control group. The distribution of the variant types and the locations of the variants detected in our NF1 patients are given in Figures 1 and 2, while the effects of the variants on the protein are given in Table 2.

Among all detected variants, 10 were novel: two nonsense variants (c.5844C>G, c.7605_7606delGAinsAT), five frameshift variants (c.208delA, c.1480_1481delTT, c.2495_2496dupAC, c.4517delC, c.6971delA), and one splice variant (c.2325+1G>C). All of these caused premature termination of protein synthesis; plus two in-frame deletions that caused deletions of eight and three amino acids, respectively (c.341_364del, c.2533_2541del). These variants were classified as pathogenic/likely pathogenic based on the ACMG/AMP guidelines for classifying genetic variants. The criteria used to classify the novel variants are given in Supplementary Material Table S2. Results from the conformational analysis (direct sequencing and MLPA) for the novel variants are given in Supplementary Material Figure S1.

The most abundant symptoms among our patients were CALMs, axillary/inguinal freckling, and neurofibromas, whereas optic glioma, Lisch nodules, and bone lesions were less frequent. Different types of cognitive impairment, ranging from mild impairment characterized by memory loss, language problems, learning difficulties, or attention deficit, to severe intellectual disability, were also present in almost half of the patients.

The genotype-phenotype correlations are schematically represented in Figure 3. Learning difficulties and intellectual disabilities were more frequent in patients with gross deletions and patients with variants located in the RAS-GAP domain of the protein, compared with the remaining patients.

Statistical analysis of the patients harboring a truncating variant in the RAS-GAP domain of the protein produced a significant one-tailed P-value of 0.0217 for the association with cognitive impairment, compared with patients harboring truncating variants outside the domain. Analysis of all of the patients with truncating variants located before and after the RAS-GAP domain did not indicate a correlation with cognitive impairment.

The 21 patients that did not meet the NF1 diagnostic criteria, had fewer CALMs and neurofibromas, compared with the frequency of those symptoms in the group that met the NIH diagnostic criteria. Other symptoms in these patients included optic gliomas, scoliosis, hexadactyly, pes cavu, epilepsy, cognitive impairment, and other unspecific symptoms. The clinical findings of all patients referred to our laboratory are listed in Table 1.

A reverse diagnostic analysis was performed after detecting a pathogenic variant in 11 of the available parents. All of the NF1 pathogenic variant-positive parents had CALMs and most had neurofibromas. Headache, low vision, bone lesions, and epilepsy were also presenting symptoms among them. In addition, cases #13/M, #15/M, and #24/F also had learning difficulties (Table 1).

DISCUSSION

The neurofibromin protein is a RAS GAP (RAS-GAP) that acts as a tumor suppressor by converting the active form of RAS (RAS-GTP) into the inactive form of RAS (RAS-GDP). The mutated neurofibromin protein results in an unchecked RAS signaling pathway, leading to uncontrolled cell growth and division.17 More than 3,100 pathogenic variants in the NF1 gene have been reported in the HGMD and ClinVar databases [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/clinvar, http://www.hgmd.cf.ac.uk], and associated with NF1 disease. All types of pathogenic variants are prevalent in NF1, but the most abundantly reported are non-sense, frameshift, and splicing variants, all of which cause premature termination of the protein sequence and loss of protein function. In our cohort, we detected 23 truncating variants (12 non-sense, six frameshift, and five splicing variants) that cause premature termination of the protein, which represented 76.7% of all variants identified. We detected ten large deletions; variants that caused in-frame deletion of amino acids (two in-frame deletions and one splicing variant) had a prevalence of 10%, whereas classical missense variants were less frequent with a prevalence of 3.3% (Figure 1, Table 2). One-half of the detected variants (56%) occurred as de novo events in the patients, which agreed with the usually reported frequencies.18

Ten of the detected pathogenic variants (33.3%) were novel and were not present in the NF1 databases or the literature. Truncating variants were most common among them, with the presence of two nonsense variants, five frameshift variants, two in-frame deletions, and one splice variant (Figure 2, Table 2). All of these novel variants were classified as pathogenic/likely pathogenic based on the ACMG, AMP, and ACGS guidelines (Table S2).13-16

Although the c.2325+1G>C and c.5844C>G; p.(Tyr1948Ter) variants were novel variants detected for the first time in our family cases (#10 and #19), alternative variants at the same coding positions have been described previously. The c.5844C>A; p.(Tyr1948Ter) variant was described by Wu-Chou et al.19 as a novel variant, but their study lacked clinical information on the patient. Patient #19 had CALMs, freckling, headache, and learning/intellectual disability, while her mother had CALMs, and neurofibromas. The c.2325+1G>A variant was first described in a Slovak 18-year-old patient with CALMs, Lisch nodules, optic glioma, neurofibromas, premature skeletal development, hamartomas, and accelerated puberty.20 Later, the variant was described in a 48-year-old woman with multiple neurofibromas, café au-lait spots, axillary and inguinal freckling, iris hamartomas, and an adrenal gland tumor (pheochromocytoma).21 In addition, the same variant was described in the neurofibromas of a mosaic patient.22 The c.2325+1G>T variant was described in an Egyptian years old boy presenting with CALMs, freckling, and congenital cataracts, but no affected parents.23 Compared to patients described in the literature, our patient #10, a carrier of the c.2325+1G>C, had neurofibromas, café au-lait spots, bone lesions, intellectual disability, and occipital tumefaction, while his mother had neurofibromas, café au-lait spots, low vision, and frequent headaches.

NF1 is a disorder with a diverse and variable phenotypic spectrum. It includes a mild phenotype in some patients and a severe phenotype in others. Symptom onset is usually in infancy or the neonatal period, with café-au-lait spots and neurofibromas present in more than 95% of the patients within the first year of life. The disease usually progresses with the onset of freckling, Lisch nodules, optic gliomas, or scoliosis present by the age of 8 years and full penetrance of the disease by the age of 20 years.18,24 Although a diagnosis can be readily established by following the NIH diagnostic criteria, these criteria are less sensitive for younger patients. It is estimated that 30-50% of infants < 1 year, without a family history, meet the NIH diagnostic criteria.25,26 For example, six patients in our cohort (#28, #29, #30, #31, #32, and #33) did not meet the diagnostic criteria defined in 1988 by the NIH;6 besides the presence of café-au-lait, they had learning difficulties/intellectual disability and other neurological symptoms (Table 1). These patients were diagnosed with NF1 based on a positive genetic test.

Including genetic testing to establish an efficient diagnosis in patients, particularly when they are young, is important, as 28.6% (6/21) of patients who did not meet the NIH diagnostic criteria (based on the present symptoms) were positive for the pathogenic NF1 variant.

In contRASt, three of the patients from our cohort who met the NF1 diagnostic criteria (#25, #26, and #27) were negative for the pathogenic NF1 gene variant (Table 1). They were negative for a pathogenic variant in other cancer-associated genes as well. We hypothesized that these patients may carry deep intronic variants or regulatory regional variants, which are out of the target range and were not detectable with the methods used. The low percentage of general mosaicism, or tissue-specific mosaicism (confined mosaicism), undetectable by our methods, was not excluded in these patients. In addition, they may have other underlying disorders that overlap with the NF1 disease spectrum. As the Legius syndrome phenotype overlaps with most of the clinical symptoms of NF1, these patients should be checked for pathogenic variants in the SPRED1 gene. Furthermore, follow-up genetic tests for pathogenic variants that cause other RAS-opathies, such as MEN2B syndrome, Leopard, or Noonan syndrome, are recommended.18,26,27

The first of our patients were children, as our analysis was the first initiative for implementing and establishing NF1 testing in North Macedonia in collaboration with a children’s hospital. Their parents were never registered as NF1 patients, or suspected of having the diagnosis. Parent #15/M had a medical history of a surgically removed meningioma and recurrent epileptic seizures; none of the other parents had any medical history with clinical issues associated with NF1. Our reverse approach (from the detected genetic defect toward the clinical diagnosis in the parents) showed that seven of them (#1/M, #6/M, #8/M, #10/M, #15/M, #30/F, and #19/M) were positive for the NIH diagnostic criteria, while the remaining four (#12/M, #13/M, #20/F, and #24/F) had isolated symptoms not specific to an NF1 diagnosis (Table 1). Given that the clinical data for the parents were limited, the correlation between members of the same family was not adequate. A detailed clinical examination and reevaluation of the phenotype are recommended for all parents positive for the NF1 pathogenic variant.

Many researchers have tried to establish a genotype-phenotype correlation in NF1 to predict the disease course. Unfortunately, as most of the mutations are unique to a single family, without any mutational hotspots, only a few genotypes have been related to specific phenotypes to date. For example, missense variants are negatively correlated with neurofibromas. The p.(Arg1241Ter) variant is correlated with the manifestation of structural brain lesions, and the p.(Tyr2285Ter) variant is correlated with Lisch nodules and endocrinological abnormalities.28 Two of our patients carried the p.(Arg1241Ter) and p.(Tyr2285Ter) variants, respectively, but they did not present with any of the associated symptoms. Clinical reevaluation and investigation of endocrinological disorders and structural brain lesions are recommended.

Frameshift variants and whole gene deletions have been associated with skeletal abnormalities, whereas intellectual disability is particularly correlated with large deletions in the NF1 gene. A higher prevalence of severe phenotypes and earlier disease onset is generally associated with predominantly truncating variants, splicing variants, and large deletions.18,29-32

Three large deletions were present in our patients: 1.4 Mb (type 1) deletions in patient #31 and patient #32 and a deletion of 43 exons (including exons 9 and 51) of the NF1 gene in patient #24. In addition to the CALMs and intellectual disability, patient #32 presented with ptosis, hexadactyly, and dysmorphism, while patient #24 presented with Lisch nodules, low vision, and epilepsy. Besides the very limited clinical presentation data of patient #31, intellectual disability was also reported. Thus, the association between cognitive impairment and large deletions was also present in our patients (Figure 3). Moreover, cognitive impairment was frequent in the patients (#13, #13/M, #15, #15/M, and #29) with a pathogenic variant located between the RAS-GAP functional domain, which spans between amino acids 1,235 and 1,451 of the neurofibromin protein. Despite learning and/or intellectual disabilities, patient #29 and patient #13 presented with epilepsy, while patient #15 presented with dysmorphism. The mother of #13 (#13/M) had recurrent headache and learning difficulties, while the mother of #15 (#15/M) had a surgically removed meningioma at the age of 3 years, learning difficulties, and epilepsy. All of the NF1 variants present in those patients were truncating and caused premature termination of the protein. These patients were analyzed using Fisher’s exact test and showed a significant one-tailed p-value of 0.0217 for the association with cognitive impairment, compared with the patients harboring truncating variants outside the domain. The analysis of all patients with truncating variants before and after the RAS-GAP domain did not show any correlation with cognitive impairment.

Klose et al.33 reported in 1998 that even the missense variant p.(Arg1276Pro) in this domain can completely disable the GAP activity of the protein, which is critical for pathogenesis. Those patients presented with numerous symptoms, including multiple neurofibromas, schwannomas, and mild intellectual and motor retardation.33 Genetically engineered mice lacking exon 31 (also known as exon 23a), which is part of the GAP domain, present with learning impairments without having a predisposition to tumors.34 Experimental studies on mice and Drosophila have shown that increased RAS activity caused by inactivated GAP is closely related to impaired learning and cognition. In particular, the GRD of the NF1 gene is necessary for long-term memory as shown by the expression of clinically relevant human NF1 variants.35,36 In contRASt, in a study with a large cohort of NF1 patients, RAS-GAP missense variants affecting the amino acids Arg1276 and Lys1444 were significantly associated with the Noonan-like phenotype (characterized by short stature, low set ears, hypertelorism, midface hypoplasia, webbed neck, pectus abnormality, and/or pulmonary stenosis), without any association with cognitive impairment.37

Although the RAS-GAP domain of the NF1 gene is the most studied region of this gene, a clear correlation between this domain and a specific phenotype has not been established. The positive correlation between our patients with RAS-GAP domain variants and cognitive impairment may be a result of the location of the variant (RAS-GAP domain), the consequence of the variant (truncating), or a combination of both. This correlation should be further investigated with a larger number of samples.

In conclusion, this is the first study of NF1 in the Republic of North Macedonia. We have identified and classified 10 novel pathogenic NF1 variants and have shown an association between large deletions and truncating variants in the RAS-GAP domain with cognitive impairment. As the patients’ phenotype is often age-dependent, including NF1 genetic testing in the NF1 diagnostics algorithm is of crucial significance for a prompt and precise diagnosis, particularly in young patients who usually do not meet the NIH clinical diagnostic criteria.

Ethics Committee Approval: The study was conducted according to the guidelines of the Declaration of Helsinki, and approved by the Ethics Committee of the Macedonian Academy of Science and Arts (03-2742/1, 29.11.2022, Skopje).

Informed Consent: Written informed consent was obtained from each patient.

Authorship Contributions: Concept- M.G.; Design- M.G.; Data Collection or Processing- M.G., G.B.; Analysis or Interpretation- M.G., G.B.; Literature Search- M.G.; Writing- D.P-K.; Critical Review- G.B., E.S-A., M.K., L.M.K., D.P-K.

Conflict of Interest: No conflict of interest was declared by the authors.

Funding: The authors declared that this study received no financial support. 

Supplementary: http://balkanmedicaljournal.org/uploads/pdf/2022-12-28-supplement.pdf

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