| Literature DB >> 24079343 |
Sofie Symoens1, Fransiska Malfait, Sanne D'hondt, Bert Callewaert, Annelies Dheedene, Wouter Steyaert, Hans Peter Bächinger, Anne De Paepe, Hulya Kayserili, Paul J Coucke.
Abstract
Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous brittle bone disorder. Whereas dominant OI is mostly due to heterozygous mutations in either COL1A1 or COL1A2, encoding type I procollagen, recessive OI is caused by biallelic mutations in genes encoding proteins involved in type I procollagen processing or chaperoning. Hitherto, some OI cases remain molecularly unexplained. We detected a homozygous genomic deletion of CREB3L1 in a family with severe OI. CREB3L1 encodes OASIS, an endoplasmic reticulum-stress transducer that regulates type I procollagen expression during murine bone formation. This is the first report linking CREB3L1 to human recessive OI, thereby expanding the OI gene spectrum.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24079343 PMCID: PMC3850743 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-8-154
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Figure 1Pedigree and clinical findings. A. Pedigree of the Turkish family. B. Post-mortem examination of foetus III:4 at 19 weeks of gestation showed bowed extremities and pes equinovarus. C. X-rays of foetus III:4 revealed beaded ribs and multiple fractures of tubular bones.
Figure 2Biochemical and molecular results. A. Biochemical collagen analysis was performed on collagens produced by the patients dermal fibroblasts, which were grown for 16 hrs in the presence of 14C-Proline. Radioactively labelled intracellular and secreted fibrillar collagen proteins were isolated and mature collagens were obtained by pepsin digestion. Foetal secreted (left panel) as well as intracellular (right panel) mature type I collagen revealed a normal electrophoretic pattern when compared to a control (C) sample. Also for the unprocessed, secreted type I procollagen a normal electrophoretic migration pattern was observed (data not shown). B. ArrayCGH analysis on a 1M SurePrint G3 Human CGH Microarray revealed a homozygous deletion of the entire CREB3L1 gene in the affected foetus III:4. C. Expression level analysis by RT-qPCR was performed in duplicate on total RNA extracted from three biological replicates of the fibroblast cell lines from foetus III:4 and three controls (C1, C2 and C3) (LightCycler480 and RealTime ready DNA Probe Master Mix, Roche). The expression level of each investigated gene was quantified using qbasePLUS (Biogazelle) [27]. HPRT1, RLP13a and YWHAZ were applied as reference targets. RT-qPCR for foetus III:4 confirmed the total absence of CREB3L1 expression when compared to control samples (C1, C2 and C3). DGKZ has two alternative (tissue-specific) isoforms [28].