Saturation editing of RNU4-2 reveals distinct dominant and recessive disorders.

Nature
Authors
Abstract

Recently, de novo variants in an 18-nucleotide region in the centre of RNU4-2 were shown to cause ReNU syndrome, a syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder that is predicted to affect tens of thousands of individuals worldwide. RNU4-2 is a non-protein-coding gene that is transcribed into the U4 small nuclear RNA component of the major spliceosome. ReNU syndrome variants disrupt spliceosome function and alter 5' splice site selection. Here we performed saturation genome editing (SGE) of RNU4-2 to identify the functional and clinical impact of variants across the entire gene. The resulting SGE function scores, derived from variants' effects on cell fitness, discriminate ReNU syndrome variants from those observed in the population and markedly outperform in silico variant effect prediction. Using these data, we redefine the ReNU syndrome critical region at single-nucleotide resolution, resolve variant pathogenicity for variants of uncertain significance and show that SGE function scores delineate variants by phenotypic severity and the extent of observed splicing disruption. Furthermore, we identify variants affecting function in regions of RNU4-2 that are critical for interactions with other spliceosome components. We show that these variants cause a new recessive neurodevelopmental disorder that is distinct from ReNU syndrome. Together, this work defines the landscape of variant function across RNU4-2, providing critical insights for both diagnosis and therapeutic development.

Year of Publication
2026
Journal
Nature
Date Published
04/2026
ISSN
1476-4687
DOI
10.1038/s41586-026-10334-9
PubMed ID
41951737
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