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Case report links biallelic WDR91 variants to impaired endosomal maturation and autophagy in neurodevelopmental disorder

Case report links biallelic WDR91 variants to impaired endosomal maturation and autophagy in neurode…
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Key Takeaway
Consider WDR91 variants as a potential genetic contributor in severe neurodevelopmental disorders, based on single-case functional evidence.

This is a case report with functional analyses investigating a single child with a severe neurodevelopmental disorder. The study examined the pathogenicity of biallelic WDR91 variants (compound heterozygous: p.Gln215* and p.Tyr15Asn) and their functional consequences on cellular processes. The primary outcome was establishing variant pathogenicity, with secondary outcomes assessing endosomal maturation, autophagy dysregulation, and related protein expression and flux.

Functional analyses of patient-derived cells showed that the WDR91 variants led to abolished WDR91 expression and reduced protein abundance. This was associated with impaired endosomal maturation and dysregulated autophagy. Specifically, autophagic flux was partially restored in experimental conditions, while autophagic turnover remained impaired. No quantitative effect sizes, absolute numbers, or statistical measures were reported for these functional outcomes.

Safety and tolerability data were not reported for this in vitro functional study. A key limitation is that the contribution of WDR91 to human disease remains incompletely defined, as stated by the authors. This is a single-case report, which precludes generalization. The findings provide functional evidence supporting the pathogenicity of these specific WDR91 variants but do not establish clinical utility or therapeutic implications. For clinicians, this report adds to the mechanistic understanding of potential genetic contributors to neurodevelopmental disorders but represents very early-stage biological evidence.

Study Details

EvidenceLevel 5
PublishedApr 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
Biallelic variants in genes regulating endosomal, lysosomal and autophagy pathways are increasingly implicated in severe neurodevelopmental disorders, yet the contribution of the Rab7 effector WDR91 to human disease remains incompletely defined. We report a child with a severe neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by progressive microcephaly, microlissencephaly, corpus callosum hypoplasia, and early-onset epilepsy, harboring compound heterozygous WDR91 variants: a truncating variant (p.Gln215*) and a missense variant (p.Tyr15Asn). Functional analyses show that p.Gln215* abolishes WDR91 expression, whereas p.Tyr15Asn reduces protein abundance through increased degradation. Reduced WDR91 expression was confirmed in primary patient-derived cells. In silico analyses suggest that p.Tyr15Asn induces a localized change within an N-terminal degron-containing region, potentially affecting protein stability. In cellular models, both variants impair early-to-late endosomal maturation and alter WDR91 localization to Rab7-positive compartments. WDR91 deficiency is further associated with transcriptional and functional evidence of autophagy dysregulation. While the p.Tyr15Asn variant partially restores autophagic flux under overexpression conditions, patient-derived cells display impaired autophagic turnover, consistent with a context-dependent functional and partial loss of function effect of this variant. Together, these findings provide functional evidence supporting the pathogenicity of WDR91 variants and implicate combined defects in endosomal maturation and autophagy in WDR91-related neurodevelopmental disease.
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