| Literature DB >> 27856697 |
David A Bulger1,2, Tetsunari Fukushige3, Sijung Yun3, Robert K Semple2, John A Hanover4, Michael W Krause3.
Abstract
Human exome sequencing has dramatically increased the rate of identification of disease-associated polymorphisms. However, examining the functional consequences of those variants has created an analytic bottleneck. Insulin-like signaling in Caenorhabditis elegans has long provided a model to assess consequences of human insulin signaling mutations, but this has not been evaluated in the context of current genetic tools. We have exploited strains derived from the Million Mutation Project (MMP) and gene editing to explore further the evolutionary relationships and conservation between the human and C. elegans insulin receptors. Of 40 MMP alleles analyzed in the C. elegans insulin-like receptor gene DAF-2, 35 exhibited insulin-like signaling indistinguishable from wild-type animals, indicating tolerated mutations. Five MMP alleles proved to be novel dauer-enhancing mutations, including one new allele in the previously uncharacterized C-terminus of DAF-2 CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing was used to confirm the phenotypic consequence of six of these DAF-2 mutations and to replicate an allelic series of known human disease mutations in a highly conserved tyrosine kinase active site residue, demonstrating the utility of C. elegans for directly modeling human disease. Our results illustrate the challenges associated with prediction of the phenotypic consequences of amino acid substitutions, the value of assaying mutant isoform function in vivo, and how recently developed tools and resources afford the opportunity to expand our understanding even of highly conserved regulatory modules such as insulin signaling. This approach may prove generally useful for modeling phenotypic consequences of candidate human pathogenic mutations in conserved signaling and developmental pathways.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR; DAF-2; INSR; Million Mutation Project; dauer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27856697 PMCID: PMC5217114 DOI: 10.1534/g3.116.037184
Source DB: PubMed Journal: G3 (Bethesda) ISSN: 2160-1836 Impact factor: 3.154
Figure 4Novel DAF-2 structural model highlighting known mutations including newly characterized MMP alleles and their phenotypic consequences. A structural model of the DAF-2 insulin-like receptor is shown as a monomer based on domain-by-domain modeling using the online I-TASSER server (http://zhanglab.ccmb.med.umich.edu/I-TASSER/) and I-TASSER 2.1 (File S7, File S8, File S9, File S10, File S11, File S12, File S13, and Table S6) (Zhang 2008). Missense and nonsense mutations from phenotypic screens and MMP mutations are shown as indicated in the legend. The domain labels have been color-coded to correspond to the protein domains in Figure 3. The predicted signal peptide sequence is represented by an N-terminal dotted line with the cleavage site indicated at residue 143 (scissors). The position and number of Fibronectin Type III-like domains is uncertain due to an additional 75 amino acids that are present in DAF-2 when compared to human INSR (Figure 5). The putative furin-like cleavage site is at residue 930 (scissors). The receptor alpha and beta strands resulting from furin cleavage are each labeled at their N- and C-terminal ends (N-α, C-α, N-β, and C-β). The position and residue changes of MMP alleles resulting in a dauer phenotype are highlighted with black arrows and text. Only MMP mutations with a dauer phenotype and the three CRISPR-Cas9 mutations at A1391 are identified. Residue numbering refers to the preproreceptor. This method of displaying mutations was adapted from (Patel ); the structure shown is a novel model of DAF-2 based on I-TASSER structural modeling.
Figure 1Strategy and analysis pipeline exploiting human insulin-receptoropathy-associated polymorphisms and linking them to emerging C. elegans genetic tools. Among the components of the insulin signaling pathway, the human insulin receptor was chosen for its high degree of sequence similarity with C. elegans DAF-2. A combination of existing dauer mutants (Daf-defective and Daf-constitutive), MMP alleles and CRISPR-Cas9 generated alleles were coupled with a recursive verification of a high-temperature induction of dauer (Hid) phenotype to provide a detailed look at conserved regions of the human insulin receptor and the functional consequences of conservative and nonconservative replacements of critical residues in the tyrosine kinase domain.
Figure 2The evolutionarily conserved insulin-like signaling pathway members, associated alleles, and their distributions. (A) The C. elegans and human insulin signaling pathways are highly conserved from the DAF-2/INSR insulin-like receptor all the way to the DAF-16/FOXO nuclear transcription factor [pathway adapted from Christensen )]. Only the pathway proteins associated with human insulin resistance and/or C. elegans dauer phenotypes are shown in this simplified diagram. Dauer-associated alleles identified in previous genetic screens are indicted in red and gray bars labeled “Missense” and “Other,” respectively. MMP alleles are shown by blue bars. (B) Distinct distributions of phenotypically selected vs. MMP DAF-2 alleles among conserved and nonconserved residues. DAF-2 alleles identified by phenotypic selection appear to be biased toward substitutions in evolutionarily conserved residues, as defined in Table 1. In contrast, MMP alleles that were selected only for viability at room temperature do not seem to exhibit this bias.
Conservation and phenotypic consequences of novel DAF-2 mutations
For each allele, the genotype, residue change (Change), degree of conservation (Cons), amino acid property change (Effect), and predicted phenotypic effect (Prediction) are indicated. In addition, high-temperature induction of dauer (Hid) phenotype, percent dauer (%D), standard deviation (STDEV), standard error (SE), number of worms assayed (N), and number of independent isolates (I.I.) are shown. Residue numbering refers to the preproreceptor.
Colors are shown as defined in Figure 3. WT, Wild Type; I., identical; Ch. Rev., charge reversal.
Substituting residue is found at the corresponding location in a human insulin-like receptor.
Substituting residue maintains conserved amino acid charge.
Identical residue found in 22/27 aligned sequences (File S1).
Conserved charge change.
Substituting residue maintains hydrophobicity of the transmembrane domain.
Figure 3Distribution of the position of phenotypic and MMP alleles in the exons and protein domains of DAF-2. The C. elegans daf-2 exons (introns have been excluded) are shown at left in black and gray, with the corresponding protein domains in color on the right. Schematic style adapted from De Meyts and Whittaker (2002). Mutations from previous phenotypic screens can be seen, with missense mutations in red and nonsense mutations in black; MMP alleles can be seen in blue on the right. Asterisks indicate which of the MMP alleles were found to have novel dauer phenotypes in this study. While the exons and protein domains are shown to scale, the positions of the lines indicating individual mutations are approximate.
Figure 5Conserved and divergent domains of four insulin-like preproreceptors. Protein schematics were drawn to scale relative to the number of amino acids in each domain. The worm DAF-2 domains were mapped onto the other receptors using anchored T-COFFEE alignment (File S1). The Fly InR C-terminus contains multiple NPXYXXM motifs, which can bind both IRS-like proteins and PI3K (Poltilove ). The Human IGF1 “dependence receptor” has a proapoptotic C-terminus (skull and crossbones) (O’Connor ; Hongo ; Liu ; Goldschneider and Mehlen 2010). Unless indicated otherwise, domain designations are as shown in Figure 3.
Validation of MMP phenotypes and modeling of conserved human disease alleles by CRISPR-Cas9
The domains, residue changes, conservation, dauer phenotype, and associated statistics for each of the engineered alleles are given. Residue numbering refers to the preproreceptor. Vertical colored bars reflecting different protein domains are consistent throughout tables and figures as defined in Figure 3. Dauer, number of dauer larvae; EL, number of embryonic lethal; Binding, ligand binding; FnIII, fibronectin Type III; Tyr K, tyrosine kinase; C-term, C-terminal.
Substituting residue is found at the corresponding location in a human insulin-like receptor.
Phenotypic consequences of human INSR and corresponding C. elegans DAF-2 mutations
The human INSR residue change (INSR Δ), associated human disorder, worm DAF-2 residue change (DAF-2 Δ), worm allele name (Allele), associated worm phenotype, and class as defined in (Gems ; Patel ) are shown. Residue numbering refers to the preproreceptor. NC, nonconditional Daf-c; WT, wild-type; ?, unknown; DS, Donohue Syndrome; RMS, Rabson-Mendenhall Syndrome. Colors as described in Figure 3.
Genomic edits confirming an MMP allele and modeling a human allelic series at the conserved residue INSR(A1135)
CRISPR-Cas9 was used to alter DAF-2(A1391) to the indicated residues and the results are shown for dauer assays performed at indicated temperatures. As observed with human INSR(A1135) mutations, these alteration result in a graded range of phenotypes, from no observable phenotype to constitutive dauer formation at all tested temperatures. N.D., not determined. Numbering refers to the preproreceptor. Color as described in Figure 3.