| Literature DB >> 29695288 |
Cameron J McDonald1, Gautam Rishi2, Eriza S Secondes2, Lesa Ostini1, Daniel F Wallace2, Darrell H G Crawford3, Hanlon Sia4, Paul Clark5, V Nathan Subramaniam6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Atypical iron overload without variation in the five clinically associated hereditary hemochromatosis genes is now recognized; however, their etiology remains unknown. Since the identification of iron overload in the bone morphogenetic protein 6 (Bmp6) knockout mouse, the search has been on for clinically pathogenic variants in the BMP6 gene. A recent report proposes that variants in the pro-peptide region of BMP6 are the underlying cause of several cases of iron overload. We performed targeted next-generation sequencing on three cases of atypical iron overload with Asian ethnicity and identified a p.Q118dup (aka p.E112indelEQ, p.Q115dup, p.Q118_L119insQ) variant in BMP6. The purpose of this study was to characterize the molecular function of the identified BMP6 variant. Molecular characterization by immunofluorescence microscopy and Western blotting of transfected cells, bioinformatics, and population analyses was performed.Entities:
Keywords: BMP6; Causal variant; Hemochromatosis; Iron overload; Next-generation sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29695288 PMCID: PMC5918843 DOI: 10.1186/s40246-018-0155-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genomics ISSN: 1473-9542 Impact factor: 4.639
Fig. 1Liver biopsy histology of case 1. Histological sections stained with a H&E, b Perls, and c Van Gieson’s stain showing significant stainable iron, without pathology
Fig. 2Cellular characterization of p.Q118dup BMP6 protein in CHO cells. a Representative immunofluorescence image of stably transfected CHO cells. The HA tag on the N-terminus of the pro-peptide, and the V5 tag on the C-terminus of the mature protein co-localize, and no difference in localization of the wildtype (WT) and p.Q118dup variant of BMP6 was observed. b Western blot identifying the full-length (FL) and mature BMP6 proteins in cell lysate (CP) and conditioned media (M) from untransfected (UT), wildtype (WT), and p.Q118dup (Q118dup) BMP6 transfected CHO cells. c Quantification of Western blot shown in b (n = 3). The ratio of mature proteins in conditioned media (M) to cell lysate (CP) shows no difference in protein secretion between WT and p.Q118dup BMP6 transfected cells
Fig. 3Cellular characterization of p.Q118dup BMP6 protein in a hepatic endothelial cell model, SK-HEP-1. a Immunofluorescence of stably transfected SK-HEP-1 cells. No difference in localization of the wildtype and p.Q118dup variant of BMP6 was observed. HA tag, N-terminus of pro-peptide; V5 tag, C-terminus of mature protein. b Western blot identifying the full-length (FL) and mature BMP6 proteins in cell lysate (CP) and conditioned media from untransfected (UT), wildtype (WT), and p.Q118dup BMP6 transfected SK-HEP-1 cells. c Quantification of Western blot shown in b (n = 3). The ratio of mature proteins in conditioned media to cell lysate shows no difference in protein secretion between WT and p.Q118dup BMP6 transfected cells