| Literature DB >> 28067622 |
Celia Zazo Seco1,2, Anna Castells-Nobau3,4, Seol-Hee Joo5, Margit Schraders1,4, Jia Nee Foo6, Monique van der Voet3,4, S Sendhil Velan7,8, Bonnie Nijhof3,4, Jaap Oostrik1,4, Erik de Vrieze1,4, Radoslaw Katana5, Atika Mansoor9, Martijn Huynen10, Radek Szklarczyk10, Martin Oti2,10,11, Lisbeth Tranebjærg12,13,14, Erwin van Wijk1,4, Jolanda M Scheffer-de Gooyert3,4, Saadat Siddique15, Jonathan Baets16,17,18, Peter de Jonghe16,17,18, Syed Ali Raza Kazmi9, Suresh Anand Sadananthan7,8, Bart P van de Warrenburg4,19, Chiea Chuen Khor6,20,21, Martin C Göpfert5, Raheel Qamar22,23, Annette Schenck3,4, Hannie Kremer1,3,4, Saima Siddiqi9.
Abstract
A consanguineous family from Pakistan was ascertained to have a novel deafness-dystonia syndrome with motor regression, ichthyosis-like features and signs of sensory neuropathy. By applying a combined strategy of linkage analysis and whole-exome sequencing in the presented family, a homozygous nonsense mutation, c.4G>T (p.Glu2*), in FITM2 was identified. FITM2 and its paralog FITM1 constitute an evolutionary conserved protein family involved in partitioning of triglycerides into cellular lipid droplets. Despite the role of FITM2 in neutral lipid storage and metabolism, no indications for lipodystrophy were observed in the affected individuals. In order to obtain independent evidence for the involvement of FITM2 in the human pathology, downregulation of the single Fitm ortholog, CG10671, in Drosophila melanogaster was pursued using RNA interference. Characteristics of the syndrome, including progressive locomotor impairment, hearing loss and disturbed sensory functions, were recapitulated in Drosophila, which supports the causative nature of the FITM2 mutation. Mutation-based genetic counseling can now be provided to the family and insight is obtained into the potential impact of genetic variation in FITM2.Entities:
Keywords: Drosophila; Dystonia; FITM2; Hearing impairment; Lipid droplets; Motor development
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Year: 2016 PMID: 28067622 PMCID: PMC5312003 DOI: 10.1242/dmm.026476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dis Model Mech ISSN: 1754-8403 Impact factor: 5.758
Fig. 1.Pedigree of family W09-1008 and results of pure tone audiometry. (A) Pedigree of the family identified with Siddiqi syndrome and segregation of the c.4G>T (p.Glu2*) mutation in FITM2. (B) Pure tone audiometry of individuals II:1, II:5 and II:6. Age (years) is indicated with the symbol keys. The p95 lines indicate that 95% of individuals of 19 years old have thresholds lower than these. The arrows indicate that the thresholds are lower than 120 dB.
Clinical features of affected individuals with the homozygous c.4G>T (p.Glu2*) mutation in FITM2
Biochemical evaluation of serum and liver fat content of affected subjects
Fig. 2.Identification of a genetic defect underlying syndromic hearing impairment in family W09-1008 and expression analysis of wild-type and p.Glu2* FITM2 fused to a FLAG-tag in HEK293T cells. (A) Partial sequences of FITM2 exon 1 are shown from an affected member, an unaffected heterozygous sib and an unaffected wild-type sib of family W09-1008. The predicted amino acid changes and the surrounding amino acids are indicated above the sequence. Sequence NM_001080472.1 was employed as a reference. (B) The left panel shows a western blot of a gel on which 10% of the cell lysate was loaded (before affinity purification). The right panel shows a western blot of a gel on which 10 µl of the lysate after affinity purification (anti-FLAG) was loaded. Wild-type (WT) FITM2 migrates around 29 kDa and it is absent upon transfection and expression of the p.Glu2* FITM2 construct. After affinity purification, a very weak band is observed at ∼16 kDa. However, the intensity of the 16 kDa band is about 2700-fold lower than the wild-type FITM2 band and therefore it is likely to have little or no biological impact. The gel was immunostained with an anti-FLAG polyclonal antibody. Of four ATG-triplets in the original reading frame, three (codon positions 94, 493 and 508) are predicted to be potential translation initiation sites by the Netstart 1.0 algorithm (Pedersen et al). Accordingly, alternative proteins would consist of 285 amino acids (aa) (26.2 kDa), 152 aa (11.2 kDa), and 147 aa (10.6 kDa), respectively. Expression constructs encode FITM2 fused to a C-terminal Strep-FLAG-tag (SF-TAP), adding approximately 6 kDa to the proteins. Wild-type FITM2 was found to migrate according to molecular weight of ∼29 kDa, which is lower than the predicted mass of the complete protein. However, fragments of similar length are observed with anti-FITM2 staining in the work of Duckert et al. (2004) and pro-peptide cleavage is predicted by the ProP algorithm. Marker size is indicated between the panels and given in kDa.
Fig. 3.Knockdown of Stacked bar graphs show the average percentage of flightless flies (black bars) and flies with normal flight responses (white bars). Error bars represent s.e.m. The indicated days represent days of age past eclosion. Fitm knocked down ubiquitously and preferentially in skeletal muscle with the αTub84B-GAL4 (A) and Mef2-GAL4 (B) promoters, respectively, and Fitm RNAi-1A and Fitm RNAi-2 showed significant locomotor impairment at all time points. (C) Fitm knockdown in the fat body (C7-GAL4 driver) using Fitm RNAi-1A and Fitm RNAi-2 revealed a progressive locomotor impairment evident at 12 days after eclosion as compared with corresponding age-matched control flies. The percentages of normal and flightless flies per experiment was used to determine statistical differences by one-way ANOVA with Tukey's correction for multiple testing, *P<0.05, **P<0.01. Average percentages are plotted in the graphs. The n refers to the number of experiments. Number and percentages of flightless and normal flies in each independent experiment can be found in Table S7.
Fig. 4.(A,B) Confocal projections of class IV da neurons within segment A3 of third instar larvae, visualized with the class IV da-specific drivers 477-GAL4 and ppk-GAL4 and UAS-mCD8::GFP. The ddaC neurons show abnormal dendritic morphology in a subset of Fitm RNAi larvae. (A) Control-1 shows ddaC contact to neighboring neurons. (B) Knockdown of Fitm in line RNAi-1A results in a severe outgrowth defect, observed in 5/18 larvae. The five highly abnormal neurons (see Fig. S6) were analyzed further, to test whether they significantly differ from the control. (C) Sholl analysis (Wearne et al., 2005) of control (n=5) and selected highly abnormal neurons (n=5) reveals defects as a measure of the soma distance. The Fitm RNAi-1A dendritic field coverage has a radius that is 60% the size of that of the control. (D-G) Quantitative analysis of dendritic trees reveals that the affected Fitm RNAi-1 neurons have (D) a reduced average branch path length (P=0.01), (E) a reduced accumulative branch path length (P≤0.0001), (F) a decreased number of branches (P≤0.0001), and (G) not significantly changed maximal branch order (P=0.2). Dorsal is up in A,B. Scale bar: 100 μm. Error bars in (D-G) indicate s.e.m. t-test between control and knockdown conditions was performed for each parameter to determine significance. P-values are depicted in each graph. Five neurons per strain, derived from five different larvae, were analyzed. The data were collected in two independent experiments. For underlying numerical data see Tables S8 and S9. More information about the depicted parameters can be found in Table S11.
Fig. 5.Knockdown of Antennal vibrations and ensuing antennal nerve potentials were measured in the Fitm RNAi-1A, Fitm RNAi-1B and Fitm RNAi-2 lines and the corresponding controls (Control-1 and Control-2) crossed to the pan-neuronal elav-GAL4 and ubiquitous αTub84B-GAL4 drivers three days after eclosion. (A) Sound-evoked antennal displacement amplitudes (upper panels, log scale) and normalized compound action potential (CAP) amplitudes as functions of the sound particle velocity. Each circle indicates a single data point. Solid (upper panels) and dashed (lower panels) lines indicate linear auditory mechanics, as observed upon the loss of mechanical amplification by auditory sensory neuron motility (Senthilan et al), and Hill fits to the pooled CAP responses of each strain, respectively. Red arrows indicate significant differences to controls. (B) Respective CAP thresholds, deduced from Hill fits to the CAP amplitudes of each individual. (C) Respective mechanical amplification gains provided by auditory sensory neuron motility. (D) Respective mechanical best frequencies of the antennal sound receivers, deduced from the mechanical fluctuations in the absence of sound stimulation (Senthilan et al., 2012). Per strain, five flies were analyzed and three independent measures were taken. Each data point represents the average response to 10 stimulus presentations. Error bars indicate s.d. *P<0.05; ns, not significant by two-tailed Mann–Whitney U-tests. If applicable, Bonferroni correction was used to correct for multiple testing. For original values, see Table S12.
Fig. 6.(A) Representative images of lipid droplets (LDs) labeled with Bodipy (red) in fat bodies of C7-GAL4-induced Fitm knockdown flies (Fitm RNAi-1A and Fitm RNAi-1B) as compared with the corresponding genetic background control flies at the indicated time points past eclosion. Nuclei were stained with DAPI (blue). Scale bar: 10 µm. (B) LD area is significantly reduced at 4, 12 and 21 days after eclosion upon Fitm knockdown with RNAi-1A and RNAi-1B constructs, and with RNAi-2 at 12 and 21 days after eclosion. The graphs display the mean LD area per experimental condition. Error bars represent the 95% confidence interval. **P<0.01 by ANOVA with Tukey correction. The number of images analyzed, the number of female flies per strain selected for this analysis and the mean size of lipid droplet per condition are, respectively, as follows. At 4 days: RNAi-1A (11, 5, 10.49 μm); RNAi-1B (14, 6, 6.33 μm); Control-1 (10, 4, 14.73 μm); RNAi-2 (17, 4, 11.86 μm); Control-2 (22, 6, 10.66 μm). At 12 days: RNAi-1A (38, 5, 9.31 μm); RNAi-1B (33, 6, 5.14 μm); Control-1 (24, 6, 22.52 μm); RNAi-2 (29, 5 15.16 μm); Control-2 (18, 6, 21.95 μm). At 21 days: RNAi-1A (16, 5, 5.14 μm); RNAi-1B (21, 7, 11.49 μm); Control-1 (31, 4, 18.56 μm); RNAi-2B (18, 6, 7.63 μm); Control-2 (32, 6, 11.44 μm). Quantification of lipid droplet size was performed in one experiment. The observation of progressively reduced lipid droplet sizes in the RNAi-lines was made in three independent experiments.