| Literature DB >> 25994218 |
Thomas Müller1, Insha Rasool2, Peter Heinz-Erian1, Eva Mildenberger3, Christian Hülstrunk3, Andreas Müller4, Laurent Michaud5, Bart G P Koot6, Antje Ballauff7, Julia Vodopiutz8, Stefan Rosipal9, Britt-Sabina Petersen10, Andre Franke10, Irene Fuchs1, Heiko Witt11, Heinz Zoller12, Andreas R Janecke1, Sandhya S Visweswariah3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Congenital sodium diarrhoea (CSD) refers to a form of secretory diarrhoea with intrauterine onset and high faecal losses of sodium without congenital malformations. The molecular basis for CSD remains unknown. We clinically characterised a cohort of infants with CSD and set out to identify disease-causing mutations by genome-wide genetic testing.Entities:
Keywords: BACTERIAL ENTEROTOXINS; CHRONIC DIARRHOEA; GUANYLATE CYCLASE; INTESTINAL ION TRANSPORT; PAEDIATRIC DIARRHOEA
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25994218 PMCID: PMC4975829 DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2015-309441
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut ISSN: 0017-5749 Impact factor: 23.059
Binding affinity of ligands to wild type and mutant GC-C
| GC-C receptor | ST (Kd, pM) | Uroguanylin (IC50, nM) |
|---|---|---|
| Wild type (non-mutant) | 421±102 | 6.9±1.3 |
| R792S | 340±182 | 5.8±1.9 |
| L775P | 357±153 | 5.2±1.9 |
| K507E | 427±114 | 2±0.9 |
| N850D | 461±77.6 | 5.7±1.1 |
GC-C, guanylate cyclase C; ST, heat-stable enterotoxin.
Molecular and clinical findings in four patients with congenital sodium diarrhoea with GUCY2C mutations
| Parameter | Patient A1109 | Patient B1933 | Patient A1111 | Patient B2425 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| c.1519A>G (13) | c.2324T>C (21) | c.2376G>C (21) | c.2548A>G (22) | |
| Protein alteration | p.K507E | p.L775P | p.R792S | p.N850D |
| Protein domain | Kinase homology | Linker region | Linker region | Catalytic |
| Consanguinity | No | No | No | No |
| Ethnicity | French/Algerian | Dutch | German | German/Polish |
| Current age (month) | 86 | 79 | 55 | 34 |
| Sex | f | m | f | f |
| Gestational age at birth (weeks) | 40 | 34 | 32 | 37 |
| Birth weight (g) | 3280 | 3310 | 2980 | 2620 |
| Present weight (kg/centile) | 21/10–25th | 19.5/10th | 19 /90–97th | 11.8/3–10th |
| Present length (cm, centile) | 120.5/25th | 116.5/25th | 109/90th | 89/10th |
| Polyhydramnios | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Plasma [Na+] (132–155 mmol/L) | 136 | 130 | 130 | 137 |
| Plasma pH | 7.26 | 7.30 | 7.24 | 7.18 |
| Plasma [HCO3−] (mmol/L) | 12.9 | 17. | n.i. | 19.6 |
| Faecal [Na+] (20–50 mmol/L) | 110 | 145 (ileal) | 150 (ileal) | 145 (ileal) |
| Faecal [Cl-] (5–25 mmol/L) | 96 | 116 (ileal) | 121 (ileal) | 109 (ileal) |
| Faecal pH (6–7) | 8 | 8 | 9 | 8.5 |
| Faecal osmolality (320–370 mosmol/kg stool) | No information | 283 | No information | No information |
| Urinary [Na+] (2–28 mmol/L) | No information | No information | 12 | <20 |
| Histology | Ischaemic ulcers | UC gastroduodenitis | Non-specific focal inflammation | Normal |
| Parenteral fluids till (month) | 14 | Present | Present | 5 |
| Current treatment | Oral | Total parenteral nutrition | Total parenteral nutrition | Oral |
| Current Na+ supplementation (mmol/kg/d) | No information | 21 | 33 | 26 |
| Complications | Sepsis | Recurrent pseudo-obstructions | Adhesion ileus, sepsis | Sepsis |
| Outcome | Normal | Partial small bowel resection, colitis, gastroduodenitis normal growth | Normal | Normal |
Figure 1Characteristic clinical presentation of congenital sodium diarrhoea at birth. Note extensive distension of the abdomen due to fluid-filled intestinal loops due to an activating GUCY2C mutation in patient A1111.
Figure 2Identification of GUCY2C mutations in patients with congenital sodium diarrhoea. Upper panels: Pedigrees of patients’ families (left) and detection of heterozygous mutations in GUCY2C in four patients by Sanger sequencing (right). Lower panel: Corresponding aligned sequence reads spanning the GUCY2C mutations identified in the patients using the Integrated Genomics Viewer (http://www.broadinstitute.org/igv/).
Figure 3Localisation and conservation of mutations in guanylate cyclase C (GC-C). (A) Schematic showing the domain organisation of GC-C, and mutations associated with disease thus far reported in GC-C. Shown on the top in magenta are earlier reported mutations leading to familial diarrhoea syndrome (S840I)5 or meconium ileus (1160A>G; and the insertion leading to truncation of the protein after Asn 757).6 Shown in red below are mutations reported in this study. Amino acids in black represent residues at predicted boundaries of the domains in GC-C. Residues 1–23 are predicted to be the signal sequence. The extracellular domain (residues 24–430) is the region where heat-stable enterotoxin, guanylin or uroguanylin bind. The receptor is a single transmembrane spanning domain protein, with the predicted transmembrane helix present from residues 431–453. Activity of GC-C is regulated allosterically by the kinase homology domain (residues 489–735). The linker region (residues 736–810) is important for suppressing basal activity of GC-C. The guanylate cyclase (catalytic) domain (residues 811–1010) is followed by a C-terminal domain (residues 1011–1073) that is important for apical localisation of GC-C. Note the presence of disease-associated mutations in almost all domains of GC-C. (B) Sequence conservation of the amino acids for which mutations in GC-C were identified in this study. Highlighted in blue is K507, pink is L775, green is R792 and yellow is N850. All residues are conserved from fish to mammals.
Figure 4Functional properties of mutant guanylate cyclase C (GC-C). (A) Western blot of individual lysates prepared from cells transiently transfected with plasmids allowing expression of either wild type or mutant GC-C proteins. Blot shows almost equivalent expression of non-mutant and mutant receptors, and two differentially glycosylated forms of GC-C are seen. Data shown are representative of three independent transfections. (B) Intracellular cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) in cells transiently expressing either wild type or mutant GC-C proteins. Cells were lysed in 0.1N HCl and cGMP measured by radioimmunoassay. Note the elevated levels of cGMP, even in the absence of ligand, in cells expressing mutant receptors. Values shown are mean±SD of three independent determinations in a single experiment, with experiments repeated thrice. (C) Either heat-stable enterotoxin (10−7 M), guanylin (10−5 M) or uroguanylin (10−6 M) was applied to cells harbouring the indicated mutant GC-C receptors, and ligand-stimulated levels of cGMP in cells were measured. Transient overexpression of mutant GC-Cs showed enhanced ligand-mediated cGMP production of the R792S, K507E and N850D mutant receptors. Values shown are mean±SD of three independent determinations in a single experiment, with experiments repeated thrice.
Figure 5Enhanced sensitivity of mutant guanylate cyclase C (GC-C) receptors to heat-stable enterotoxin (ST) and uroguanylin. Varying amounts of ST peptide (A) or uroguanylin (B) were applied to cells expressing either wild type or mutant forms of GC-C, and cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) produced was measured by radioimmunoassay. Values shown are the mean±SD of three independent determinations across three experiments. EC50 values were calculated across all experiments and are shown in the table (inset) as mean±SD.