| Literature DB >> 27486783 |
Elma El Khouri1, Lucie Thomas2, Ludovic Jeanson2, Emilie Bequignon3, Benoit Vallette2, Philippe Duquesnoy2, Guy Montantin4, Bruno Copin5, Florence Dastot-Le Moal5, Sylvain Blanchon6, Jean François Papon7, Patrick Lorès1, Li Yuan8, Nathalie Collot4, Sylvie Tissier4, Catherine Faucon9, Gérard Gacon1, Catherine Patrat10, Jean Philippe Wolf11, Emmanuel Dulioust11, Bruno Crestani12, Estelle Escudier5, André Coste3, Marie Legendre5, Aminata Touré13, Serge Amselem5.
Abstract
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is an autosomal-recessive disease due to functional or ultra-structural defects of motile cilia. Affected individuals display recurrent respiratory-tract infections; most males are infertile as a result of sperm flagellar dysfunction. The great majority of the PCD-associated genes identified so far encode either components of dynein arms (DAs), which are multiprotein-ATPase complexes essential for ciliary motility, or proteins involved in DA assembly. To identify the molecular basis of a PCD phenotype characterized by central complex (CC) defects but normal DA structure, a phenotype found in ∼15% of cases, we performed whole-exome sequencing in a male individual with PCD and unexplained CC defects. This analysis, combined with whole-genome SNP genotyping, identified a homozygous mutation in DNAJB13 (c.833T>G), a gene encoding a HSP40 co-chaperone whose ortholog in the flagellated alga Chlamydomonas localizes to the radial spokes. In vitro studies showed that this missense substitution (p.Met278Arg), which involves a highly conserved residue of several HSP40 family members, leads to protein instability and triggers proteasomal degradation, a result confirmed by the absence of endogenous DNAJB13 in cilia and sperm from this individual. Subsequent DNAJB13 analyses identified another homozygous mutation in a second family; the study of DNAJB13 transcripts obtained from airway cells showed that this mutation (c.68+1G>C) results in a splicing defect consistent with a loss-of-function mutation. Overall, this study, which establishes mutations in DNAJB13 as a cause of PCD, unveils the key role played by DNAJB13 in the proper formation and function of ciliary and flagellar axonemes in humans.Entities:
Keywords: DNAJB13; PCD; central complex; cilia; radial spoke; sperm flagellum
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27486783 PMCID: PMC4974111 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2016.06.022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025