| Literature DB >> 18949062 |
Shiwani Sharma1, Kathryn P Burdon, Alpana Dave, Robyn V Jamieson, Yuval Yaron, Frank Billson, Lionel Van Maldergem, Birgit Lorenz, Jozef Gécz, Jamie E Craig.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Nance-Horan syndrome is typically characterized by severe bilateral congenital cataracts and dental abnormalities. Truncating mutations in the Nance-Horan syndrome (NHS) gene cause this X-linked genetic disorder. NHS encodes two isoforms, NHS-A and NHS-1A. The ocular lens expresses NHS-A, the epithelial and neuronal cell specific isoform. The NHS-A protein localizes in the lens epithelium at the cellular periphery. The data to date suggest a role for this isoform at cell-cell junctions in epithelial cells. This study aimed to identify the causative mutations in new patients diagnosed with Nance-Horan syndrome and to investigate the effect of mutations on subcellular localization of the NHS-A protein.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18949062 PMCID: PMC2571945
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Vis ISSN: 1090-0535 Impact factor: 2.367
Primer sequences for the PCR amplification of NHS coding regions.
| 1 | 1A* | GCGCACCCCTAAATTTCT | CTGCCTGCACAGCCATTG | 311 | 2 | 60 |
| 1B* | GCTTGGAGGAGACCAGAAAGT | CCTGGAAGAGGCTGCAAG | 494 | 2 | 62 | |
| 1C* | GCTGCTCATGCTGGACCTA | GGTGGGAAGGCGAGAGTAGT | 349 | 1.5 | 60 | |
| 2 | 2 | TGCAGTAGTCTGGACTTCCACT | CCCATGGATTTCATTTCAGG | 426 | 1.5 | 60 |
| 3 | 3 | ACTCCCAAGGGGAAAAGAGA | CTGATGTTTCCTCAGCAGCA | 257 | 1.5 | 60 |
| 1b | 1b | TCTCTCTCTCTGTATGCACCAAA | TCATGCCCTGTTGACTCAGA | 352 | 1.5 | 60 |
| 4 | 4 | GGGCCTATTTCTGACCTCATT | AGCAGCACAGATTTTGAACA | 377 | 1.5 | 60 |
| 5 | 5 | TCTTTCCTTACTTCCCGTCAAA | CATCTGTACTAGGCGGAGGAA | 282 | 1.5 | 60 |
| 6 | 6A | CTGCCAGCCCACAGATCTAC | GCTTGGAGCCTCACTGAAAT | 501 | 1.5 | 60 |
| 6B | TCCCCGGGAAGGTAATAGAG | TGAGGGGCTGTGTTTAGTGA | 501 | 1.5 | 60 | |
| 6C | TGACCACCAGTCATCCAGTG | ACCACAGTCAAAGTGCATGG | 505 | 1.5 | 60 | |
| 6D | CATCAGACAAAGCGGACACT | TGGTGGAATATCCGAAGCAT | 503 | 1.5 | 60 | |
| 6E | AATGGAAAACGCCAATCTTC | AGAGGGTTGCTGTAGTGAGGA | 502 | 1.5 | 60 | |
| 6F | CTTGGCATCTCCATCAAGTG | TGCGGCCTAATCTTACTTGG | 498 | 1.5 | 60 | |
| 6G | CCTTGCAATTACACCAACGA | GAGGGTGCCTTCTGTACCTG | 534 | 1.5 | 60 | |
| 6H | AAAACACGCCAACCAAAAAC | ATTCCAGGAAGTGCCATGAG | 501 | 1.5 | 60 | |
| 7 | 7 | CAGTAGCGTGCTGGGTAACTT | GGGCAAAACCTTTGTTGTA | 235 | 1.5 | 60 |
| 8 | 8A | TTTCATAAAAACGTGAACTGAGTGA | GCAAAGCTCTTCGAGGAAAA | 489 | 1.5 | 60 |
| 8B | CCAGAGGTCTCCTGGTCTCA | GTAAGGGTTTTGGCCTTTGC | 511 | 1.5 | 60 |
Exons 1, 6, and 8 were amplified with multiple overlapping amplimers. The expected product size is given along with the required final concentration of Mg2+ and the optimal annealing temperature. An asterisk indicates that it required the addition of Q solution (Qiagen).
Sequence of primers used for PCR-based mutagenesis.
| NHS-F01 | 5′-TACCGGAATTCTCCTTTCGCCAAGCGGATCGTGGAG |
| NHSA400R | 5′-GCTGCCGGAGGGTACCGCCAGAGCGGCGTTGCTGA |
| NHSA400F | 5′-ACGCCGCTCTGGCGGTACCCTCCGGCAGCTCTCGGACGT |
| NHSA1350R | 5′-CAGCAATCAGAATATCCTCGGTTTGGCACTCAGAG |
| NHSA2220F | 5′-TTTTAGTCCTGAGCGTCCCAAGGCAGACAG |
| NHSA2701R | 5′-GGAAGATTGGCGTTTTGAATTCAAGAAGGCGTGTTGGCGA |
| NHSA2701F | 5′-GCCAACACGCCTTCTTGAATTCAAAACGCCAATCTTCCCACCA |
| NHSA3050R | 5′-AGCCACTTGATGGAGATGCCAAGCCAGCCA |
| NHSA4340F | 5′-GCAGTCATTCACAGATCCAAGAGGAAAGTACTTG |
| NHSA4451R | 5′-ACATTACTGCTGGGTGAAGAGATCTAACTGGCGCTGCTGCTGCTA |
| NHSA4451F | 5′-CAGCAGCAGCGCCAGTTAGATCTCTTCACCCAGCAGTAATGTGAC |
| Tag2A810R | 5′-TACGACTCACTATAGGGCGAATTGGGTACAC |
The NHS-A mutations generated by PCR-based mutagenesis.
| 400delC R134fs) | 195 (21.5) | NHSF01 and NHSA400R (56) | NHSA400F and NHSA1350R (58) | NHSF01 and NHSA1350R (65) | EcoRI/EcoRV |
| C2701T (R901X) | 901 (99) | NHSA2220F and NHSA2701R (50) | NHSA2701F and NHSA3050R (52) | NHSA2220F and NHSA3050R (63) | HindIII/PmeI |
| 4071del299bp T1357fs) | 1367 (150) | NHSA4340F and NHSA4451R (56) | NHSA4451F and Tag2A810R (56) | NHSA4340F and Tag2A810R (62) | ScaI/SalI |
The predicted size of each mutant protein is indicated. The primer combinations used for each round of PCR and the annealing temperature for each primer set is given. The restriction enzyme sites used for the cloning of each partial mutant cDNA are specified.
Clinical features of NHS patients tested.
| 101 | Congenital Cataract Microcornea Microphthalmia Nystagmus Strabismus | - | No | No | K1198fs | 6 |
| 102 | Congenital Cataract | - | - | - | None | |
| 104 | Congenital Cataract | Unusual dentition | Yes | Yes | None | |
| 105 | Congenital Cataract | Diastema | Yes | Large ears | R879X | 6 |
| 120 | Congenital Cataract Microphthalmia Glaucoma | Diastema Supernumerary Screwdriver-blade shape | No | Yes | R373X | 5 |
| 122 | Congenital Cataract Microphthalmia Strabismus | Supernumerary Abnormal shape | Develop-mental delay | Long thin face | I1302fs | 6 |
| 124 | Congenital Cataract | Supernumerary maxillary incisors | Yes | Large ears | None | |
| 127 | Congenital Cataract Microphthalmia | Diastema | No | Prominent ears | P264fs | 3 |
| 134 | Congenital Cataract Microphthalmia | - | - | - | None | |
| 135 | Congenital Cataract Microcornea | Supernumerary maxillary incisors | No | High nasal bridge | R248X | 3 |
The mutation identified in NHS is shown at the protein level. Missing information is indicated by “-”. MR=mental retardation, FD=facial dysmorphism, fs=frameshift mutation, K=lysine, R=arginine, I=isoleucine, P=proline, X=stop codon.
Figure 1Chromatograms of identified mutations. In each case, the wild type sequence is shown above the mutated sequence for each patient. A shows the 3596insA in patient 101; B shows the C2635T in patient 105; C shows the C1117T in patient 120; D shows the 3908del11bp in patient 122; E shows the 792delA in patient 127; and F shows the C742T in patient 135.
Figure 2Expression of mutant NHS-A proteins in mammalian cells. A: Lysates of HEK 293A cells transiently transfected with GFP-NHS-A400delC and pEGFP-C1 constructs and untransfected cells were analyzed by western blotting with anti-GFP antibody. B: Lysates of HEK 293A cells transiently transfected with FLAG-NHS-A, FLAG-NHS-AC2701T and FLAG-NHS-A4071del299bp in pCMV-Tag 2A and untransfected cells were analyzed by western blotting with anti-FLAG tag antibody. A protein band of greater than 150 kDa seen in all the lanes is due to non-specific binding of the anti-FLAG tag antibody (indicated with an asterisk). A very faint protein band of approximately 130 kDa in the NHS-A and 4071Δ299bp lanes is most likely due to protein degradation. The molecular masses of proteins standards are indicated. UT=untransfected cells.
Figure 3Localization of GFP-NHS-A400delC mutant in MDCK cells. Cells were transfected with GFP-NHS-A and GFP-NHS-A400delC fusion constructs and pEGFP-C1 control. Transiently expressed fusion proteins were visualized by confocal microscopy. GFP-NHS-A wild type protein primarily localized to the cellular periphery whereas GFP-NHS-A400delC mutant protein localized in the cytoplasm and nucleus. Apparent peripheral distribution of GFP is an experimental artifact seen only between some adjoining transfected cells. Images were taken with a 60X objective.
Figure 4Localization of FLAG-tagged wild type and mutant NHS-A proteins in MDCK cells. MDCK cells stably expressing FLAG-NHS-A, FLAG-NHS-AC2701T, and FLAG-NHS-A4071del299bp proteins and untransfected cells were immunolabeled with an anti-FLAG tag antibody, and labeling was detected by confocal microscopy. Wild type FLAG-NHS-A protein mainly localized to the cellular periphery whereas FLAG-NHS-AC2701T and FLAG-NHS-A4071del299bp mutant proteins localized in the cytoplasm. No non-specific immunoreactivity was observed in untransfected cells. Representative images from four independent experiments are shown. Images were taken with a 60X objective.