- Schaffer, Ashleigh E;
- Eggens, Veerle RC;
- Caglayan, Ahmet Okay;
- Reuter, Miriam S;
- Scott, Eric;
- Coufal, Nicole G;
- Silhavy, Jennifer L;
- Xue, Yuanchao;
- Kayserili, Hulya;
- Yasuno, Katsuhito;
- Rosti, Rasim Ozgur;
- Abdellateef, Mostafa;
- Caglar, Caner;
- Kasher, Paul R;
- Cazemier, J Leonie;
- Weterman, Marian A;
- Cantagrel, Vincent;
- Cai, Na;
- Zweier, Christiane;
- Altunoglu, Umut;
- Satkin, N Bilge;
- Aktar, Fesih;
- Tuysuz, Beyhan;
- Yalcinkaya, Cengiz;
- Caksen, Huseyin;
- Bilguvar, Kaya;
- Fu, Xiang-Dong;
- Trotta, Christopher R;
- Gabriel, Stacey;
- Reis, André;
- Gunel, Murat;
- Baas, Frank;
- Gleeson, Joseph G
Neurodegenerative diseases can occur so early as to affect neurodevelopment. From a cohort of more than 2,000 consanguineous families with childhood neurological disease, we identified a founder mutation in four independent pedigrees in cleavage and polyadenylation factor I subunit 1 (CLP1). CLP1 is a multifunctional kinase implicated in tRNA, mRNA, and siRNA maturation. Kinase activity of the CLP1 mutant protein was defective, and the tRNA endonuclease complex (TSEN) was destabilized, resulting in impaired pre-tRNA cleavage. Germline clp1 null zebrafish showed cerebellar neurodegeneration that was rescued by wild-type, but not mutant, human CLP1 expression. Patient-derived induced neurons displayed both depletion of mature tRNAs and accumulation of unspliced pre-tRNAs. Transfection of partially processed tRNA fragments into patient cells exacerbated an oxidative stress-induced reduction in cell survival. Our data link tRNA maturation to neuronal development and neurodegeneration through defective CLP1 function in humans.