Pleiotropic role of TRAF7 in skull-base meningiomas and congenital heart disease

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Abstract

While somatic variants of TRAF7 (Tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor 7) underlie anterior skull-base meningiomas, here we report the inherited mutations of TRAF7 that cause congenital heart defects. We show that TRAF7 mutants operate in a dominant manner, inhibiting protein function via heterodimerization with wild-type protein. Further, the shared genetics of the two disparate pathologies can be traced to the common origin of forebrain meninges and cardiac outflow tract from the TRAF7-expressing neural crest. Somatic and inherited mutations disrupt TRAF7-IFT57 interactions leading to cilia degradation. TRAF7-mutant meningioma primary cultures lack cilia, and TRAF7 knockdown causes cardiac, craniofacial, and ciliary defects in Xenopus and zebrafish, suggesting a mechanistic convergence for TRAF7-driven meningiomas and developmental heart defects.

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Mishra-Gorur, K., Barak, T., Kaulen, L. D., Henegariu, O., Jin, S. C., Aguilera, S. M., … Gunel, M. (2023). Pleiotropic role of TRAF7 in skull-base meningiomas and congenital heart disease. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 120(16). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2214997120

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