| Literature DB >> 25789548 |
Adrien Frommer1, Rim Hjeij1, Niki T Loges1, Christine Edelbusch1, Charlotte Jahnke1, Johanna Raidt1, Claudius Werner1, Julia Wallmeier1, Jörg Große-Onnebrink1, Heike Olbrich1, Sandra Cindrić1, Martine Jaspers2, Mieke Boon3, Yasin Memari4, Richard Durbin4, Anja Kolb-Kokocinski4, Sascha Sauer5, June K Marthin6, Kim G Nielsen6, Israel Amirav7, Nael Elias8, Eitan Kerem9, David Shoseyov9, Karsten Haeffner10, Heymut Omran1.
Abstract
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a genetically heterogeneous recessive disorder caused by several distinct defects in genes responsible for ciliary beating, leading to defective mucociliary clearance often associated with randomization of left/right body asymmetry. Individuals with PCD caused by defective radial spoke (RS) heads are difficult to diagnose owing to lack of gross ultrastructural defects and absence of situs inversus. Thus far, most mutations identified in human radial spoke genes (RSPH) are loss-of-function mutations, and missense variants have been rarely described. We studied the consequences of different RSPH9, RSPH4A, and RSPH1 mutations on the assembly of the RS complex to improve diagnostics in PCD. We report 21 individuals with PCD (16 families) with biallelic mutations in RSPH9, RSPH4A, and RSPH1, including seven novel mutations comprising missense variants, and performed high-resolution immunofluorescence analysis of human respiratory cilia. Missense variants are frequent genetic defects in PCD with RS defects. Absence of RSPH4A due to mutations in RSPH4A results in deficient axonemal assembly of the RS head components RSPH1 and RSPH9. RSPH1 mutant cilia, lacking RSPH1, fail to assemble RSPH9, whereas RSPH9 mutations result in axonemal absence of RSPH9, but do not affect the assembly of the other head proteins, RSPH1 and RSPH4A. Interestingly, our results were identical in individuals carrying loss-of-function mutations, missense variants, or one amino acid deletion. Immunofluorescence analysis can improve diagnosis of PCD in patients with loss-of-function mutations as well as missense variants. RSPH4A is the core protein of the RS head.Entities:
Keywords: cilia; human radial spoke protein 1; human radial spoke protein 4A; human radial spoke protein 9; primary ciliary dyskinesia
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25789548 PMCID: PMC5306451 DOI: 10.1165/rcmb.2014-0483OC
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol ISSN: 1044-1549 Impact factor: 6.914