| Literature DB >> 28335084 |
Chiara Piubelli1, Annalisa Castagna1, Giacomo Marchi1, Monica Rizzi1, Fabiana Busti1, Sadaf Badar1, Monia Marchetti2, Marco De Gobbi3, Antonella Roetto3, Luciano Xumerle4, Eda Suku4, Alejandro Giorgetti4, Massimo Delledonne4, Oliviero Olivieri1, Domenico Girelli1.
Abstract
Hereditary Hemochromatosis (HH) is a genetically heterogeneous disorder caused by mutations in at least five different genes (HFE, HJV, TFR2, SLC40A1, HAMP) involved in the production or activity of the liver hormone hepcidin, a key regulator of systemic iron homeostasis. Nevertheless, patients with an HH-like phenotype that remains completely/partially unexplained despite extensive sequencing of known genes are not infrequently seen at referral centers, suggesting a role of still unknown genetic factors. A compelling candidate is Bone Morphogenetic Protein 6 (BMP6), which acts as a major activator of the BMP-SMAD signaling pathway, ultimately leading to the upregulation of hepcidin gene transcription. A recent seminal study by French authors has described three heterozygous missense mutations in BMP6 associated with mild to moderate late-onset iron overload (IO). Using an updated next-generation sequencing (NGS)-based genetic test in IO patients negative for the classical HFE p.Cys282Tyr mutation, we found three BMP6 heterozygous missense mutations in four patients from three different families. One mutation (p.Leu96Pro) has already been described and proven to be functional. The other two (p.Glu112Gln, p.Arg257His) were novel, and both were located in the pro-peptide domain known to be crucial for appropriate BMP6 processing and secretion. In silico modeling also showed results consistent with their pathogenetic role. The patients' clinical phenotypes were similar to that of other patients with BMP6-related IO recently described. Our results independently add further evidence to the role of BMP6 mutations as likely contributing factors to late-onset moderate IO unrelated to mutations in the established five HH genes.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28335084 DOI: 10.1002/ajh.24730
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hematol ISSN: 0361-8609 Impact factor: 10.047