| Literature DB >> 29432562 |
Takeshi Mizuguchi1, Mitsuko Nakashima2, Mitsuhiro Kato3, Nobuhiko Okamoto4, Hirokazu Kurahashi5, Nina Ekhilevitch6, Masaaki Shiina7, Gen Nishimura8, Takashi Shibata9, Muneaki Matsuo10, Tae Ikeda11, Kazuhiro Ogata7, Naomi Tsuchida1, Satomi Mitsuhashi1, Satoko Miyatake1,12, Atsushi Takata1, Noriko Miyake1, Kenichiro Hata13, Tadashi Kaname14, Yoichi Matsubara15,16, Hirotomo Saitsu2, Naomichi Matsumoto1.
Abstract
Calcineurin is a calcium (Ca2+)/calmodulin-regulated protein phosphatase that mediates Ca2+-dependent signal transduction. Here, we report six heterozygous mutations in a gene encoding the alpha isoform of the calcineurin catalytic subunit (PPP3CA). Notably, mutations were observed in different functional domains: in addition to three catalytic domain mutations, two missense mutations were found in the auto-inhibitory (AI) domain. One additional frameshift insertion that caused premature termination was also identified. Detailed clinical evaluation of the six individuals revealed clinically unexpected consequences of the PPP3CA mutations. First, the catalytic domain mutations and frameshift mutation were consistently found in patients with nonsyndromic early onset epileptic encephalopathy. In contrast, the AI domain mutations were associated with multiple congenital abnormalities including craniofacial dysmorphism, arthrogryposis and short stature. In addition, one individual showed severe skeletal developmental defects, namely, severe craniosynostosis and gracile bones (severe bone slenderness and perinatal fractures). Using a yeast model system, we showed that the catalytic and AI domain mutations visibly result in decreased and increased calcineurin signaling, respectively. These findings indicate that different functional effects of PPP3CA mutations are associated with two distinct disorders and suggest that functional approaches using a simple cellular system provide a tool for resolving complex genotype-phenotype correlations.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29432562 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddy052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150