| Literature DB >> 28074573 |
Luca Pannone1,2,3, Gianfranco Bocchinfuso4, Elisabetta Flex2, Cesare Rossi5, Giuseppina Baldassarre6, Christina Lissewski7, Francesca Pantaleoni1, Federica Consoli8, Francesca Lepri1, Monia Magliozzi1,8, Massimiliano Anselmi4, Silvia Delle Vigne2, Giovanni Sorge9, Kadri Karaer10, Goran Cuturilo11,12, Alessandro Sartorio13,14, Sigrid Tinschert15, Maria Accadia8, Maria C Digilio1, Giuseppe Zampino16, Alessandro De Luca8, Hélène Cavé17,18, Martin Zenker7, Bruce D Gelb19, Bruno Dallapiccola1, Lorenzo Stella4, Giovanni B Ferrero6, Simone Martinelli2, Marco Tartaglia1.
Abstract
Germline mutations in PTPN11, the gene encoding the Src-homology 2 (SH2) domain-containing protein tyrosine phosphatase (SHP2), cause Noonan syndrome (NS), a relatively common, clinically variable, multisystem disorder. Here, we report on the identification of five different PTPN11 missense changes affecting residues Leu261 , Leu262 , and Arg265 in 16 unrelated individuals with clinical diagnosis of NS or with features suggestive for this disorder, specifying a novel disease-causing mutation cluster. Expression of the mutant proteins in HEK293T cells documented their activating role on MAPK signaling. Structural data predicted a gain-of-function role of substitutions at residues Leu262 and Arg265 exerted by disruption of the N-SH2/PTP autoinhibitory interaction. Molecular dynamics simulations suggested a more complex behavior for changes affecting Leu261 , with possible impact on SHP2's catalytic activity/selectivity and proper interaction of the PTP domain with the regulatory SH2 domains. Consistent with that, biochemical data indicated that substitutions at codons 262 and 265 increased the catalytic activity of the phosphatase, while those affecting codon 261 were only moderately activating but impacted substrate specificity. Remarkably, these mutations underlie a relatively mild form of NS characterized by low prevalence of cardiac defects, short stature, and cognitive and behavioral issues, as well as less evident typical facial features.Entities:
Keywords: Noonan syndrome; PTPN11 mutations; genotype-phenotype correlation analysis; structural and functional studies
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28074573 DOI: 10.1002/humu.23175
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878