| Literature DB >> 29293958 |
Ayesha Imtiaz1,2, Inna A Belyantseva1, Alisha J Beirl3, Cristina Fenollar-Ferrer4, Rasheeda Bashir2, Ihtisham Bukhari2, Amal Bouzid5, Uzma Shaukat6, Hela Azaiez7, Kevin T Booth7,8, Kimia Kahrizi9, Hossein Najmabadi9, Azra Maqsood1,2, Elizabeth A Wilson1, Tracy S Fitzgerald10, Abdelaziz Tlili5, Rafal Olszewski11, Merete Lund1, Taimur Chaudhry1, Atteeq U Rehman1, Matthew F Starost12, Ali M Waryah6, Michael Hoa11, Lijin Dong13, Robert J Morell14, Richard J H Smith7,8, Sheikh Riazuddin6,15,16, Saber Masmoudi5, Katie S Kindt3, Sadaf Naz2, Thomas B Friedman1.
Abstract
The Cell Division-Cycle-14 gene encodes a dual-specificity phosphatase necessary in yeast for exit from mitosis. Numerous disparate roles of vertebrate Cell Division-Cycle-14 (CDC14A) have been proposed largely based on studies of cultured cancer cells in vitro. The in vivo functions of vertebrate CDC14A are largely unknown. We generated and analyzed mutations of zebrafish and mouse CDC14A, developed a computational structural model of human CDC14A protein and report four novel truncating and three missense alleles of CDC14A in human families segregating progressive, moderate-to-profound deafness. In five of these families segregating pathogenic variants of CDC14A, deaf males are infertile, while deaf females are fertile. Several recessive mutations of mouse Cdc14a, including a CRISPR/Cas9-edited phosphatase-dead p.C278S substitution, result in substantial perinatal lethality, but survivors recapitulate the human phenotype of deafness and male infertility. CDC14A protein localizes to inner ear hair cell kinocilia, basal bodies and sound-transducing stereocilia. Auditory hair cells of postnatal Cdc14a mutants develop normally, but subsequently degenerate causing deafness. Kinocilia of germ-line mutants of mouse and zebrafish have normal lengths, which does not recapitulate the published cdc14aa knockdown morphant phenotype of short kinocilia. In mutant male mice, degeneration of seminiferous tubules and spermiation defects result in low sperm count, and abnormal sperm motility and morphology. These findings for the first time define a new monogenic syndrome of deafness and male infertility revealing an absolute requirement in vivo of vertebrate CDC14A phosphatase activity for hearing and male fertility.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29293958 PMCID: PMC6059191 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddx440
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150