| Literature DB >> 30553809 |
Sasha Jardine1, Neel Dhingani1, Aleixo M Muise2.
Abstract
The increasing incidence of pediatric inflammatory bowel disease, coupled with the efficiency of whole-exome sequencing, has led to the identification of tetratricopeptide repeat domain 7A (TTC7A) as a steward of intestinal health. TTC7A deficiency is an autosomal-recessively inherited disease. In the 5 years since the original description, more than 50 patients with more than 20 distinct disease-causing TTC7A mutations have been identified. Patients show heterogenous intestinal and immunologic disease manifestations, including but not limited to multiple intestinal atresias, very early onset inflammatory bowel disease, loss of intestinal architecture, apoptotic enterocolitis, combined immunodeficiency, and various extraintestinal features related to the skin and/or hair. The focus of this review is to highlight trends in patient phenotypes and to consolidate functional data related to the role of TTC7A in maintaining intestinal homeostasis. TTC7A deficiency is fatal in approximately two thirds of patients, and, as more patients continue to be discovered, elucidating the comprehensive role of TTC7A could show druggable targets that may benefit the growing cohort of individuals suffering from inflammatory bowel disease.Entities:
Keywords: Genetics; Inflammatory Bowel Disease; Monogenic; Multiple Intestinal Atresia; PI4K; Primary Immunodeficiency; Very Early Onset IBD; Whole-Exome Sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30553809 PMCID: PMC6406079 DOI: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2018.12.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol ISSN: 2352-345X
Figure 1Summary of the role of TTC7A in intestinal epithelial cells and the consequences of its mutation. (A) TTC7A competent. TTC7A and FAM126A chaperone PI4KIIIα to the plasma membrane. EFR3 tethers the PI4KIIIα complex to the plasma membrane where PI4KIIIα catalyzes the conversion of PI to PI4P.18, 19, 24 The synthesis of PI4P is an important regulatory step in the phosphatidyl inositol–phosphate pathway, which is important for survival pathways and intestinal epithelial cell polarity. Phosphatidyl inositol–phosphate lipids are differentially produced and turned over on apical and basal membranes of polarized intestinal epithelial cells; thus, phosphatidyl inositol–phosphate levels aid in coordinating apicobasal polarity, which is critical for epithelium integrity. Cytoskeletal homeostasis is important in maintaining cell polarity and cell adhesions.5, 35 Tight junctions, adherens junctions, and integrins are regulated in part by actin dynamics and maintain cell adhesions, contributing to intestinal epithelial barrier function.36, 76 (B) TTC7A deficiency. Truncating mutations (ie, nonsense, frameshifts, large deletions) are associated with more severe phenotypes and are predicted to cause a complete loss of function in which TTC7A transcripts are thought to be degraded via nonsense-mediated decay.2, 3, 6, 7, 24 Because TTC7A is a scaffold for multiple proteins, its structure is critical to its role in binding, shuttling, and tethering the PI4KIIIα complex to the plasma membrane; thus, partial or total loss of TTC7A reduces PI4P synthesis (1) via the PI4KIIIα complex (dottedarrow).3, 19 Alterations to the structure of TTC7A (ie, truncated or hypomorphic protein) have been shown to alter the kinase activity and/or the positioning of PI4KIIIα at the membrane. Decreases in PI4P affects cell polarity (2), signaling, homeostasis, and survival. H&E staining of intestinal biopsy specimens from TTC7A-deficiency patients showed pseudostratification, which points to defects in apicobasal polarity (3). Similarly, tightly regulated apical and basal membranes, marked by the actin belt and integrins, respectively, were mislocalized in TTC7A patient-derived organoids.5, 6 Loss of apicobasal polarity jeopardizes the integrity of the epithelium, contributing to the diverse epithelial defects observed in TTC7A deficiency.5, 6 (4) An increase in intestinal epithelial cell apoptosis, activated via caspase cleavage, was a common feature in patient histology and in vitro functional studies.3, 5, 6, 8 TTC7A deficiency, through unknown mechanisms (dashed arrow), is correlated with increased phosphorylation of myosin light chain (5) and numerous other downstream targets in the RhoA pathway (omitted for simplicity).5, 6 Myosin light-chain phosphorylation initiates actomyosin contraction, which can disturb junction and integrin adhesion proteins and promote cell lifting (6).35, 36, 77, 78 Increases in intestinal epithelial cell apoptosis, actomyosin contraction, and cell lifting disrupts epithelial barrier function (7).54, 56 Furthermore, a weakened intestinal barrier results in the translocation of luminal bacteria into the lamina propria, which can trigger an inflammatory response (8).34, 76 The role of TTC7A in the cell is incompletely understood, making it difficult to link its known functions to the development of MIA, another poorly understood disease.
Figure 2Known TTC7A mutations grouped by patient outcomes. Patient naming codes are derived from Table 1 and are shown in red or black to indicate deceased or living patients, respectively. Within patient outcome groupings (ie, deceased, living, or mixed), patients are arranged so that deletion, frameshift, or nonsense mutations affecting both alleles are listed first, followed by patients with missense mutations on at least 1 allele. TTC7A has 20 exons that include 9 TPR domains that are represented by the complementary DNA and protein schematics, respectively (NM_020458.3 and NP_065191.2). Unaffected protein sequences are indicated in dark grey, while grey connecting lines indicate exon deletions. Light grey stretches are downstream of frameshift and deletion mutations and represent areas where there is a predicted loss of protein expression resulting from nonsense-mediated decay mechanisms.2, 3, 6, 7, 24 Specific amino acid mutations are indicated by color bars: blue, missense; red, nonsense (ie, stop codon or X); green, frameshifts. Patient M1 is not represented because of a lack of specifics regarding their deletion mutation. ER, endoplasmic reticulum; NMD, nonsense mediated decay.
Mutations, Clinical Phenotypes, and Outcomes of Reported TTC7A-Deficiency Patients
| Patient | Cited mutations | TPR Δ | Ethnicity | MIA | IBD | CID | Alive/deceased, age |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S1-5 | Hom c.1000+ 3del AAGT, Ex7 del | + | French Canadian | + | Deceased, <7 days; MIA | ||
| S6 | Het c.1000+ 3del AAGT, Ex7 del; c. 133074 A>G Ex20; p.L823P | + | French Canadian | + | Deceased, 47 days; MIA | ||
| S7 | Het c.1000+ 3del AAGT, Ex7 del; c. 133074 A>G Ex20; p.L823P | + | French Canadian | + | + | + | Deceased, 1 y; MIA |
| C1 | Hom c.1919+1G>A Ex16 del | + | Arabic | + | + | Deceased, 3 mo; | |
| C2 | Hom c. 313 del TATC, Ex2/Ex3 del p.Y105fs | + | Serbian | + | + | Deceased, 1 mo; MIA | |
| C3 | Hom c. 313 del TATC, Ex2/Ex3 del p.Y105fs | + | Bosnian | + | + | Alive, 2.8 y | |
| C4 | Het c.762 del G Ex5;p.K254fs c.2468T>C Ex20; p.L823P | + | Unknown | + | + | Alive, 2 y | |
| C5 | Het c.1817A>G Ex16, p.K606R | French Canadian, mixed European | + | + | Alive, 22 mo | ||
| C6 | Het c.2033C>A Ex18; p.S678X; c.2134C>T Ex18; p.Q712X | + | Italian | + | + | + | Deceased, 10 mo; pneumonitis |
| C7 | Hom c.1196T>C Ex9; p.L399P | Italian | + | + | Alive, 9 mo | ||
| C8 | Unknown mutations | + | Italian | + | + | Deceased, 8 mo; sepsis | |
| A1 | Het c.211G>A Ex2; p.E71K; c.1578C>T Ex14; p.Q526X | + | Caucasian/Sudanese | + | + | + | Deceased, 11 mo; parainfluenza pneumonia, ARDS |
| A2 | Het c.844-1G>T, Ex 7 del; c.1204-2A>G, Ex 10 del | + | Caucasian | + | + | + | Deceased, 3 mo; pulmonary embolism |
| A3 | Het c.844-1G>T, Ex 7 del; c.1204-2A>G, Ex 10 del | + | Caucasian | + | + | Deceased, 19 mo; cardiac arrest | |
| A4 | Hom c.2494 G>A Ex20; p.A832T | + | Caucasian | + | Alive, 14 mo | ||
| A5 | Hom c.2494 G>A Ex20; p.A832T | + | Caucasian | + | Deceased, 11 mo; | ||
| Ag1 | Het c.1652 C>A Ex15; p.A551D c.2482C>T Ex20; p.E828X | + | Irish/Ashkenazi Jewish | + | + | Alive, 7 mo | |
| B1 | Het c.185-348 del Ex2; p.D62-S116 del c.185-517 del Ex2/3; p.D62-173G del | Mixed European | + | + | Deceased, 2.5 y; sepsis | ||
| B2 | Hom c. 829 C>T; p.Q277X Ex 6 del | Saudi Arabian | + | + | Deceased, 9 mo; pulmonary hemorrhage | ||
| B3 | Hom c.2496 del CG Ex20, p.A832X | + | Sri Lankan | + | + | Alive, 73 mo | |
| B4 | Het c.1288-1392 del Ex 12 del; c.1616C>T Ex 14; p.S539L | Norwegian | + | + | Deceased, 8 mo; sepsis | ||
| B5 | Het c.1008C>G Ex8; p.Y336X c.1479 delG Ex 12; p.L493 fsX13 | Mixed European | + | + | Deceased, 3.9 y; virus pneumonia | ||
| B6 | Het c.1510+105 T>A Ex12 del; c.1673 insG Ex15; p.A558GfsX7 | Mixed European | + | + | Deceased, 7 mo; cytomegalovirus pneumonitis | ||
| L1 | Hom c.211G>A Ex2, p.E71K | French | + | + | Alive, 5 mo | ||
| L2 | Hom c.211G>A Ex2, p.E71K | Deceased, 6 mo; HSCT | |||||
| L3 | Hom c.211G>A Ex2, p.E71K | Deceased, 9 mo; HSCT | |||||
| L4 | Hom c.211G>A Ex2, p.E71K | Deceased, 8 mo; enteropathy | |||||
| L5 | Hom c.211G>A Ex2, p.E71K | Alive, 10 mo | |||||
| L6 | Hom c.211G>A Ex2, p.E71K | Alive, 10 mo | |||||
| L7 | Hom c.211G>A Ex2, p.E71K | Alive, 2 y | |||||
| L8 | Hom c.211G>A Ex2, p.E71K | Alive, 4 y | |||||
| L9 | Hom c.211G>A Ex2, p.E71K | Deceased, 4 y; sepsis | |||||
| L10 | Hom c.211G>A Ex2, p.E71K | Deceased, 14 y; gastric carcinoma | |||||
| L11 | Hom c.211G>A Ex2, p.E71K | Alive, 14 y | |||||
| L12 | Hom c.211G>A Ex2, p.E71K | Alive, 28 y | |||||
| L13 | Hom c.211G>A Ex2, p.E71K | Alive, 50 y | |||||
| L14 | Het c.911T Ex7; p.L304 fsX59; c.1433T>C Ex12, p. L478P | French | + | Alive, 18 mo | |||
| G1 | Hom c. 313 del TATC, Ex2/Ex3 del p.Y105fs | + | Bosnian | + | + | Alive, 3 y | |
| W1 | Hom c.1037 T>C Ex8; p.L346P | Turkish | + | + | Deceased, 15 mo, sepsis | ||
| Y1 | Het c.2018-2 A>G; Ex18 del c.2569 G>T Ex20; p.E857X | + | Malaysian | + | Deceased, 27 mo, sepsis | ||
| Y29 | Het c.2018-2 A>G; Ex18 del c.2569G>T Ex20; p.E857X | + | Malaysian | + | Deceased, 3 days, sepsis | ||
| K1 | Het p.E191FsX; Ex4 p.I854F Ex20 | + | Mediterranean | + | Alive, 77 mo | ||
| K2 | Hom p.G45_A55 del Ex1 | Middle Eastern | + | + | Alive, 86 mo | ||
| K3 | Het p.E71K Ex2 p.E96 Ex2 | British | + | + | Alive, 20 mo | ||
| Li1 | Het c.223 G>A p.E75K Ex2 c. 520-521 del CT fs174X27 Ex4 | + | Taiwanese | + | + | Deceased, 8 mo, sepsis | |
| Li2 | Het c.223 G>A p. E75K Ex 2 c. 520-521 del CT fs174X27 Ex4 | + | Taiwanese | + | + | Deceased, 4 mo, liver failure | |
| La1 | Het c.1817A>G; p.K606R Ex16 c.2014 T>C; p.S672P Ex17 | European | CVID | Alive, 15 y | |||
| N1 | Het c.1616 C>T p. S539L Ex14 c. 2515 G>A p.A839T Ex20 | + | Portuguese | + | + | + | Alive, 3 y |
| M1 | Hom c. 53344_53347 del | Unknown | + | + | Deceased, 8 mo; graft-versus-host disease, liver failure | ||
| F1 | Hom c.1709A>G; p.H570R Ex15 | + | North African | + | + | + | Alive, 43 mo |
| F2 | Het c. 189C>G; p.D63E Ex2 c. 412 C>T; p.R138X Ex3 | + | Unknown | + | + | Alive, 18 mo |
NOTE. Superscript numbers in Patient column refer to reference citations.
ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; c, complementary DNA location; CVID, common variable immune deficiency; Het, compound heterozygous mutation; Hom, homozygous mutation; p. protein or amino acid location.
National Center for Biotechnology Information reference sequences for TTC7A were absent or varied between publications. Among the 15 reports citing TTC7A-deficiency patients, 63, 5, 6, 8, 9, 15 referenced mutations with NM_020458.3 (transcript variant 2, coding sequence from 369 to 2945 nucleotides) and NP_065191.2 (isoform 2, 858 amino acids). Lien et al and Neves et al reported mutations based on NM_001288951.1 (transcript variant 1, coding sequence from 369 to 3017 nucleotides) and NP_001275880.1 (isoform 1, 882 amino acids). Samuels et al based DNA annotations on NC_000002.11 because one of the mutations affected an intronic region, however, the protein annotation was based on NP_065191.2. To our knowledge, the remaining 62, 4, 7, 10, 12, 14 publications did not report the National Center for Biotechnology Information coding sequence and protein reference codes.
Surviving patient age is as reported in the original publication.
Maternal.