| Literature DB >> 29198720 |
Romain Luscan1, Sabrina Mechaussier2, Antoine Paul1, Guoling Tian3, Xavier Gérard2, Sabine Defoort-Dellhemmes4, Natalie Loundon5, Isabelle Audo6, Sophie Bonnin7, Jean-François LeGargasson8, Julien Dumont9, Nicolas Goudin10, Meriem Garfa-Traoré10, Marc Bras11, Aurore Pouliet12, Bettina Bessières13, Nathalie Boddaert14, José-Alain Sahel6, Stanislas Lyonnet1, Josseline Kaplan2, Nicholas J Cowan3, Jean-Michel Rozet15, Sandrine Marlin16, Isabelle Perrault2.
Abstract
Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA) is a neurodegenerative disease of photoreceptor cells that causes blindness within the first year of life. It occasionally occurs in syndromic metabolic diseases and plurisystemic ciliopathies. Using exome sequencing in a multiplex family and three simplex case subjects with an atypical association of LCA with early-onset hearing loss, we identified two heterozygous mutations affecting Arg391 in β-tubulin 4B isotype-encoding (TUBB4B). Inspection of the atomic structure of the microtubule (MT) protofilament reveals that the β-tubulin Arg391 residue contributes to a binding pocket that interacts with α-tubulin contained in the longitudinally adjacent αβ-heterodimer, consistent with a role in maintaining MT stability. Functional analysis in cultured cells overexpressing FLAG-tagged wild-type or mutant TUBB4B as well as in primary skin-derived fibroblasts showed that the mutant TUBB4B is able to fold, form αβ-heterodimers, and co-assemble into the endogenous MT lattice. However, the dynamics of growing MTs were consistently altered, showing that the mutations have a significant dampening impact on normal MT growth. Our findings provide a link between sensorineural disease and anomalies in MT behavior and describe a syndromic LCA unrelated to ciliary dysfunction.Entities:
Keywords: Leber congenital amaurosis; TUBB4B; abnormal dynamics of microtubule growth; de novo mutations; dominant mutations; early-onset sensorineural hearing loss; mosaicism; retino-cochlear tubulinopathy
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29198720 PMCID: PMC5812887 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.10.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025