In the rapidly evolving landscape of human genetics, the bottleneck has shifted. While high-throughput sequencing technology has made it easier than ever to identify genetic variants, the clinical interpretation of these findings—determining whether a specific mutation is the "smoking gun" behind a patient’s condition—remains a formidable challenge. A recent study published in Human Genetics and Genomics Advances (HGGA) by Dr. Hyung-lok Chung and his colleagues offers a masterclass in how to bridge this chasm between raw data and clinical utility.
By utilizing Drosophila melanogaster (the common fruit fly) as a scalable, in vivo functional platform, the team has provided a definitive functional classification for variants in the MARK2 gene, which has been implicated in neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs). This work not only provides clarity for families affected by these rare conditions but also establishes a template for the future of variant interpretation.
Main Facts: The MARK2 Connection
The study, titled "Loss-of-Function Variants in MARK2 Cause Neurodevelopmental Disorder," centers on the MARK2 gene—a member of the microtubule-affinity regulating kinase family. These kinases are crucial for regulating the cytoskeleton, a foundational process in brain development and neuronal architecture.
When MARK2 function is compromised, the downstream effects on neurodevelopment can be profound. However, as with many newly identified disease genes, researchers were initially faced with a "backlog" of variants of uncertain significance (VUS). The core achievement of Dr. Chung’s team was to move beyond mere observation. They subjected eight distinct NDD-linked variants to a comprehensive battery of tests, including assessments of viability, lifespan, protein expression, and wing patterning in humanized fly models.
The result was a sophisticated functional classification:
- Truncating variants: Confirmed as true loss-of-function.
- Missense variants: Identified as hypomorphic (partially functional).
- Non-pathogenic variants: Identified at least one variant that behaved indistinguishably from the wild-type, demonstrating the vital necessity of functional validation to avoid false-positive clinical diagnoses.
Chronology: From Collaboration to Validation
The project was born from an ongoing, multi-disciplinary collaboration with Dr. Wendy K. Chung, a leader in genomic medicine. The workflow was structured to leverage the specific strengths of both groups: Dr. Wendy Chung’s team focused on the clinical heavy lifting—patient ascertainment and large-scale genomic analysis—while Hyung-lok Chung’s lab provided the functional validation engine.
The process, however, was not without its hurdles. Midway through their research, a separate group published a case series in the American Journal of Human Genetics (AJHG) documenting MARK2-associated NDDs. For many early-career investigators, such a development might have signaled the end of a project.
"That was a frustrating moment," Dr. Chung admits. "But I felt that good science doesn’t lose its value just because someone else is working in the same area." Rather than abandoning their work, the team pivoted to focus on the unique value proposition of their study: while the clinical report identified the gene’s involvement, it lacked the systematic, in vivo functional classification of specific patient-derived variants. By staying the course, the researchers ensured that their work provided the mechanistic depth that clinicians need to move from genetic diagnosis to informed patient care.
Supporting Data: The Drosophila Advantage
Why Drosophila? In an era dominated by CRISPR-edited organoids and advanced computational modeling, the humble fruit fly remains a powerhouse of genetics. Dr. Chung argues that Drosophila serves as a practical bridge between discovery and validation due to its scalability and the relative ease of manipulating its genome.
The team’s study utilized multiple tissue-specific assays to generate a "comprehensive functional picture" of each variant. By testing these variants in a living organism rather than a static cell culture, the researchers could observe how specific mutations affected the organism’s overall health, including its development and lifespan.

This model serves as a "functional benchmark." For every VUS that enters the clinical pipeline, the ability to rapidly test it in a model organism—and categorize it as either loss-of-function, hypomorphic, or benign—could save years of uncertainty for families searching for a diagnostic answer. This approach is now being formalized through the newly established Houston Methodist Drosophila Functional Genomics Core, which aims to provide these exact services to the broader clinical genetics community.
Official Perspectives: The Challenges of the Independent Investigator
Dr. Chung’s journey reflects the broader challenges faced by the next generation of scientists. Transitioning from a postdoctoral fellow to an independent Principal Investigator (PI) is a process of immense professional and personal recalibration.
"Securing grant funding as a new PI takes a lot of effort—writing proposals, going through study sections, dealing with rejections, all while trying to build a lab at the same time," says Dr. Chung. "No one really prepares you for how much that takes out of you."
Beyond the financial pressures, there is the ongoing struggle to balance administrative responsibilities—budgets, compliance, and mentorship—with the "deep work" required for scientific innovation. Dr. Chung emphasizes the psychological challenge of focus: in a world of infinite biological questions, the ability to choose which projects to pursue and, more importantly, which to delay, is a critical skill for survival in academia. He credits the supportive environment at the Houston Methodist Research Institute and the Department of Neurology as the stabilizing force that allowed his team to focus on the science rather than the infrastructure.
Implications: A New Era for Clinical Interpretation
The impact of this research extends well beyond MARK2. As we enter an era where population-scale whole-genome sequencing is becoming standard practice, the number of identified variants is rapidly outpacing our ability to interpret them.
1. Connecting Rare and Common Diseases
Dr. Chung notes that the most fascinating shift in the field is the growing bridge between rare Mendelian disorders and common neurodegenerative conditions like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and multiple sclerosis. Historically, these areas were treated as distinct silos. However, as sequencing reveals that rare coding variants contribute significantly to the risk profiles of common diseases, the functional genomics tools used for rare disease gene discovery are becoming essential for understanding complex, polygenic conditions.
2. Standardizing Clinical Criteria
The classification framework established in this study provides a concrete template for the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) and the Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) criteria. By defining the functional behavior of MARK2 variants, the team has made it easier for future clinical labs to interpret similar variants with greater confidence.
3. A Call to Action for Clinicians
For clinicians and human geneticists, the message is clear: functional validation is no longer a "nice-to-have" add-on; it is an essential component of clinical genetics. The establishment of functional genomics cores, like the one operated by Dr. Chung at Houston Methodist, provides a path forward for those dealing with unresolved VUS.
"A genetic diagnosis is the first step," says Dr. Chung. "But understanding what a variant actually does to protein function and brain development is what helps clinicians counsel families and think about next steps."
As the scientific community continues to grapple with the "backlog" of genetic data, the work of Dr. Hyung-lok Chung and his team stands as a testament to the power of methodical, organismal functional genomics. By combining the precision of molecular biology with the scale of Drosophila models, they are not just identifying new disease genes; they are building the infrastructure of 21st-century medicine—one variant at a time.
