Functional consequence of pathogenic GABRA3 variants determines whether X-linked inheritance is dominant or recessive

Katrine M Johannesen, Khaing Phyu Aung, Vivian Wy Liao, Nathan L Absalom, Han C Chua, Xue N Gan, Miaomiao Mao, Chaseley E McKenzie, Hian M Lee, Sebastian Ortiz, Rebecca C Spillmann, Vandana Shashi, Rodney A Radtke, Ghayda M Mirzaa, P Anne Weisner, Josue Flores Daboub, Caroline Hagedorn, Pinar Bayrak-Toydemir, Desiree DeMille, Jian ZhaoNandita Bajaj, Yline Capri, Boris Keren, Miriam Schmidts, Ingrid Mbh van de Laar, Marjon A van Slegtenhorst, Rafal Ploski, Marta Bogotko, Danielle K Bourque, Ebba Alkhunaizi, Lauren Chad, Nada Quercia, Houda Elloumi, Ingrid M Wentzensen, Michael C Kruer, Pritha Bisarad, Carolina I Galaz-Montoya, Violeta Rusu, Dominique Braun, Katie Angione, Jessica C Win, Camilo Espinosa-Jovel, Pia Zacher, Konrad Platzer, Samuel F Berkovic, Ingrid E Scheffer, Mary Chebib, Guido Rubboli, Rikke S Møller, Christopher A Reid, Philip K Ahring

Abstract

Disorders of GABRA3, the only epilepsy-associated GABAA receptor subunit gene on the X chromosome, have eluded clinical clarity due to ambiguous inheritance patterns and variable phenotypes. The long-standing assumption that all pathogenic variants cause loss of function further obscured genotype-phenotype relationships and hindered progress. Here, we curated a cohort of individuals with a GABRA3 variant, integrating deep phenotyping, genotyping, family history, and electrophysiology with a targeted mouse model. Among 43 individuals with 19 GABRA3 variants, functional analyses revealed gain- and loss-of-function effects, each linked to distinct clinical profiles. Gain-of-function variants were associated with severe, treatment-resistant epilepsy and profound intellectual disability, disproportionately affecting males, who were often nonambulant and had cortical visual impairment. Loss-of-function variants produced milder phenotypes, with epilepsy rarely observed; affected males showed behavioral issues and language delay, while females were unaffected carriers. Our gain-of-function (Gabra3Q242L/+) mouse model mirrored these sex-specific differences, showing increased seizure susceptibility, early death, and marked cortical hyperexcitability. These insights resolve longstanding uncertainties surrounding GABRA3 and redefine how X-linked disorders are interpreted. They demonstrate that it is the functional impact of a variant, not its mere presence, that determines whether a condition manifests dominantly or recessively. This distinction carries important implications for genetic counseling, precision medicine, and the broader interpretation of X-linked neurodevelopmental disorders.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftThe Journal of clinical investigation
Vol/bind136
Udgave nummer2
ISSN0021-9738
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 16 jan. 2026

Fingeraftryk

Dyk ned i forskningsemnerne om 'Functional consequence of pathogenic GABRA3 variants determines whether X-linked inheritance is dominant or recessive'. Sammen danner de et unikt fingeraftryk.

Citationsformater