Abrogation of MAP4K4 protein function causes congenital anomalies in humans and zebrafish. Author Victoria Patterson, Farid Ullah, Laura Bryant, John Griffin, Alpa Sidhu, Sheila Saliganan, Mackenzie Blaile, Margarita Saenz, Rosemarie Smith, Sara Ellingwood, Dorothy Grange, Xuyun Hu, Maimaiti Mireguli, Yanfei Luo, Yiping Shen, Maureen Mulhern, Elaine Zackai, Alyssa Ritter, Kosaki Izumi, Julia Hoefele, Matias Wagner, Korbinian Riedhammer, Barbara Seitz, Nathaniel Robin, Dana Goodloe, Cyril Mignot, Boris Keren, Helen Cox, Joanna Jarvis, Maja Hempel, Cynthia Gibson, Frederic Mau-Them, Antonio Vitobello, Ange-Line Bruel, Arthur Sorlin, Sarju Mehta, Lucy Raymond, Kelly Gilmore, Bradford Powell, Karen Weck, Chumei Li, Anneke van Silfhout, Thea Giacomini, Maria Mancardi, Andrea Accogli, Vincenzo Salpietro, Federico Zara, Neeta Vora, Erica Davis, Rebecca Burdine, Elizabeth Bhoj Publication Year 2023 Type Journal Article Abstract We report 21 families displaying neurodevelopmental differences and multiple congenital anomalies while bearing a series of rare variants in (). MAP4K4 has been implicated in many signaling pathways including c-Jun N-terminal and RAS kinases and is currently under investigation as a druggable target for multiple disorders. Using several zebrafish models, we demonstrate that these human variants are either loss-of-function or dominant-negative alleles and show that decreasing Map4k4 activity causes developmental defects. Furthermore, MAP4K4 can restrain hyperactive RAS signaling in early embryonic stages. Together, our data demonstrate that MAP4K4 negatively regulates RAS signaling in the early embryo and that variants identified in affected humans abrogate its function, establishing as a causal locus for individuals with syndromic neurodevelopmental differences. Journal Science advances Volume 9 Issue 17 Pages eade0631 Date Published 04/2023 ISSN Number 2375-2548 DOI 10.1126/sciadv.ade0631 Alternate Journal Sci Adv PMCID PMC10132768 PMID 37126546 PubMedPubMed CentralGoogle ScholarBibTeXEndNote X3 XML