| Literature DB >> 33308444 |
Yuh-Charn Lin1, Marcello Niceta2, Valentina Muto2, Barbara Vona3, Alistair T Pagnamenta4, Reza Maroofian5, Christian Beetz6, Hermine van Duyvenvoorde7, Maria Lisa Dentici2, Peter Lauffer8, Sadeq Vallian9, Andrea Ciolfi2, Simone Pizzi2, Peter Bauer6, Nana-Maria Grüning6, Emanuele Bellacchio2, Andrea Del Fattore2, Stefania Petrini10, Ranad Shaheen11, Dov Tiosano12, Rana Halloun13, Ben Pode-Shakked14, Hatice Mutlu Albayrak15, Emregül Işık15, Jan M Wit16, Marcus Dittrich17, Bruna L Freire18, Debora R Bertola19, Alexander A L Jorge18, Ortal Barel20, Ataf H Sabir21, Amal M J Al Tenaiji22, Sulaima M Taji22, Nouriya Al-Sannaa23, Hind Al-Abdulwahed23, Maria Cristina Digilio2, Melita Irving24, Yair Anikster25, Gandham S L Bhavani26, Katta M Girisha26, Thomas Haaf27, Jenny C Taylor4, Bruno Dallapiccola2, Fowzan S Alkuraya28, Ruey-Bing Yang29, Marco Tartaglia30.
Abstract
Signal peptide-CUB-EGF domain-containing protein 3 (SCUBE3) is a member of a small family of multifunctional cell surface-anchored glycoproteins functioning as co-receptors for a variety of growth factors. Here we report that bi-allelic inactivating variants in SCUBE3 have pleiotropic consequences on development and cause a previously unrecognized syndromic disorder. Eighteen affected individuals from nine unrelated families showed a consistent phenotype characterized by reduced growth, skeletal features, distinctive craniofacial appearance, and dental anomalies. In vitro functional validation studies demonstrated a variable impact of disease-causing variants on transcript processing, protein secretion and function, and their dysregulating effect on bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling. We show that SCUBE3 acts as a BMP2/BMP4 co-receptor, recruits the BMP receptor complexes into raft microdomains, and positively modulates signaling possibly by augmenting the specific interactions between BMPs and BMP type I receptors. Scube3-/- mice showed craniofacial and dental defects, reduced body size, and defective endochondral bone growth due to impaired BMP-mediated chondrogenesis and osteogenesis, recapitulating the human disorder. Our findings identify a human disease caused by defective function of a member of the SCUBE family, and link SCUBE3 to processes controlling growth, morphogenesis, and bone and teeth development through modulation of BMP signaling.Entities:
Keywords: BMP; BMP receptors; SCUBE; bone morphogenetic protein; genomic sequencing; intracellular signaling; mechanism of disease; morphogenesis; skeletal development
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33308444 PMCID: PMC7820739 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2020.11.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025