| Literature DB >> 23251618 |
Darren N Saunders1, Elizabeth A Tindall, Robert F Shearer, Jacquelyn Roberson, Amy Decker, Jean Amos Wilson, Vanessa M Hayes.
Abstract
Mutations in the SERPINA1 gene can cause deficiency in the circulating serine protease inhibitor α(1)-Antitrypsin (α(1)AT). α(1)AT deficiency is the major contributor to pulmonary emphysema and liver disease in persons of European ancestry, with a prevalence of 1 in 2500 in the USA. We present the discovery and characterization of a novel SERPINA1 mutant from an asymptomatic Middle Eastern male with circulating α(1)AT deficiency. This 49 base pair deletion mutation (T379Δ), originally mistyped by IEF, causes a frame-shift replacement of the last sixteen α(1)AT residues and adds an extra twenty-four residues. Functional analysis showed that the mutant protein is not secreted and prone to intracellular aggregation.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23251618 PMCID: PMC3520848 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0051762
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Identification of a novel SerpinA1 Mutant. A.
DGGE banding patterns representing four controls (lanes 2–5) heterozygous for the M3 mutation (E376D), while our patient (lane 1), although also heterozygous for the M3 variant also presents with a shifted (faster migrating) banding depicting the novel deletion mutation (T379Δ). B. Sanger sequencing defines the deleted base pairs. The predicted amino acid sequence resulting from the novel 49 bp deletion (denoted by * on lower chromatogram) observed in our patient, results in the replacement of 16 amino acids and the addition of 24 amino acids through partial translation of the 3′ UTR.
Figure 2Functional Characterisation of α1AT
Δ Mutant. (A) Immunoblot (anti-GFP) detection of α1AT-GFP fusion protein (C-terminal tag) in whole-cell lysate and concentrated conditioned media (ie secreted) from HEK293T cells transfected with plasmids expressing either wild-type or Δ379 mutant α1AT-GFP. Red arrow denotes position of ∼75 kDa α1AT-GFP band, note the absence of this band in conditioned media from cells transfected with Δ379 mutant, indicating impaired secretion of mutant protein; (B) Immunoblot (anti-α1AT) detection of α1AT-GFP fusion protein (C-terminal tag) in whole-cell lysate, or following immunprecipitation from conditioned media (i.e. secreted) from HEK293T cells transfected with plasmids expressing either wild-type or Δ379 mutant α1AT-GFP; (C) Transfection of either wild-type or Δ379 mutant α1AT with an N-terminal EGFP fusion into HEK293T cells clearly indicated normal proteolytic processing of the secretion signal peptide. Both ∼75 kDA and ∼27 kDA bands are visible, representing full-length and processed (i.e. signal peptide cleaved) α1AT-GFP fusion protein respectively; (D) At higher expression levels, accumulation of insoluble Δ379 mutant α1AT was observed in HEK293T cells, clearly denoted by the presence of a darker band in the insoluble fraction from cells transfected with Δ379 mutant; (E) Detection of soluble (whole-cell lysate), insoluble and secreted (concentrated conditioned media) α1AT in HeLa cells transfected with either wild-type or Δ379 mutant α1AT-GFP. Red arrow denotes position of ∼75 kDa α1AT-GFP band. Note the absence of this band in conditioned media from cells transfected with Δ379 mutant, indicating impaired secretion of mutant protein; (E) Fluorescent micrographs of HEK293T cells following transfection with either wild-type or Δ379 mutant α1AT-GFP expression plasmids. Increased intracellular aggregation of mutant protein is clearly visible. NB: Loading controls represent α-tubulin immunoblot or PonceauS staining in lysate or secreted (conditioned media) samples, respectively.