| Literature DB >> 31811534 |
Rebecca Preston1, Richard W Naylor1, Graham Stewart2, Agnieszka Bierzynska3, Moin A Saleem3, Martin Lowe4, Rachel Lennon5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lowe syndrome and Dent-2 disease are caused by mutations in the OCRL gene, which encodes for an inositol 5-phosphatase. The renal phenotype associated with OCRL mutations typically comprises a selective proximal tubulopathy, which can manifest as Fanconi syndrome in the most extreme cases.Entities:
Keywords: FSGS; Glomerular disease; Lowe syndrome; OCRL; Podocyte; Proteinuria
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31811534 PMCID: PMC7056711 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-019-04317-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.714
Fig. 1Genetic analysis identifies a novel splice mutant in OCRL. a Chromatogram’s from Sanger sequencing showing the c1467-2A>G mutation (highlighted red) detected in the index patient, sibling and heterozygous mother. Top panel shows non-mutant sequence and the corresponding intron exon boundary. b Schematic representation of splicing outcomes for normal OCRL (top) and the index patient OCRL sequence containing the c1467-2A>G mutation (bottom). Use of the Spliceport predictive tool [34] showed a strong splice acceptor site on exon 15 in the normal OCRL (+ 1.57), which is completely lost in the variant OCRL (− 2.23) (for reference the splice acceptor values for exon 14 and exon 16 are also shown (black), these were unchanged in the variant). Three other splicing predictive tools (SpliceSiteFinder-like, MaxEntScan [35] and NNSPLICE [36], which are algorithms run on the bioinformatics interface Alamut) also showed the OCRL variant abolished the splice acceptor site (data not shown). Taken together, these programs strongly suggest that the mature transcript of the OCRL variant will undergo exon skipping of exon 15 to yield the mature transcript illustrated (right)
Fig. 2In situ hybridisation detects OCRL expression in the glomeruli of zebrafish and adult human kidney tissue. a Top panels show OCRL expression in a whole-mount zebrafish embryo (left panel, lateral view, anterior to the left) and in transverse section through the glomerulus (right panel, highlighted with white dotted outline) at 5 days post fertilisation (dpf). b In situ hybridisation of normal adult human kidney tissue showing OCRL expression within the glomerulus. The left panel shows a low magnification image with glomeruli and proximal tubules labelled. The right panel shows a close-up view of the glomerulus with OCRL expression labelled in podocytes (black arrow), mesangial cells (green arrow) and endothelial cells (red arrow)
Fig. 3Immunoprecipitation and protein pull-down analysis showing interaction between CD2AP, OCRL and IPIP27A. a Western blot analysis showing that OCRL is abundant in cultured glomerular cells (endothelial cells, mesangial cells and podocytes). b, c Co-immunoprecipitation experiments using control antibody (IgG) or antibodies to OCRL (b) or CD2AP (c) demonstrating interaction between the endogenous proteins. d, e Protein pull-downs using GST control or GST-IPIP27A as bait showing binding to endogenous OCRL (d) and CD2AP (e). Glutathione S-transferase (GST), immunoprecipitation (IP)