| Literature DB >> 35211795 |
Ania B Koziell1,2, Paul S Hartley3, Moin A Saleem4, Agnieszka Bierzynska5, Katherine Bull6, Sara Miellet3,7, Philip Dean8, Chris Neal5, Elizabeth Colby5, Hugh J McCarthy5,9, Shivaram Hegde10, Manish D Sinha1, Carmen Bugarin Diz2, Kathleen Stirrups11, Karyn Megy11,12, Rutendo Mapeta11,13, Chris Penkett11, Sarah Marsh8, Natalie Forrester7, Maryam Afzal5, Hannah Stark11, Nihr BioResource11, Maggie Williams8, Gavin I Welsh5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Variants in genes encoding nuclear pore complex (NPC) proteins are a newly identified cause of paediatric steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS). Recent reports describing NUP93 variants suggest these could be a significant cause of paediatric onset SRNS. We report NUP93 cases in the UK and demonstrate in vivo functional effects of Nup93 depletion in a fly (Drosophila melanogaster) nephrocyte model.Entities:
Keywords: FSGS; NUP93; Nephrocyte; Podocyte; SRNS
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35211795 PMCID: PMC9489583 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-022-05440-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.651
NUP93 mutations
| Patient # | Nucleotide change | Amino acid change | Amino acid conservation to species | SIFT | PolyPhen | MutationTaster | REVEL | CADD PHRED | EVE Score | EVE Class (75% Set) | gnomAD AF (AC/NH/AN) | TWINSUK AF (AC) | Variant Significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 388 | c.2084 T > C | p.Leu695Ser | D | PosD | DC | 0.649 | 29.2 | 0.951 | P | 0.00003536 (10/0/282796) | 0.000269687 (1) | Pos. p | |
| c.2267 T > C | p.Leu756Ser | D | PrD | DC | 0.662 | 31 | 0.824 | P | 0.000269687 (1) | Pos. p | |||
| 278, 5000 | c.1423G > A (H) | p.Ala475Thr | Baker's yeast | D | PrD | DC | 0.741 | 29.3 | 0.982 | P | Pos. p | ||
| S013682 | c.1909A > G (H) | p.Lys637Glu | Fruitfly | T | PosD | DC | 0.372 | 24.8 | 0.332 | B | VUS | ||
| S013282 | c.1473 T > G | p.His491Gln | Baker's yeast | D | PrD | DC | 0.731 | 22.5 | 0.849 | P | 0.000004196 (1/0/238330) | Pos. p | |
| c.1538-6A > G | 15.47 | Pos. p |
H, homozygous; gnomAD, v2.1.1 (The Genome Aggregation Database, http://gnomad.broadinstitute.org/ [35]; AF, allele frequency; AC, allele count; AH, number of homozygotes; AN, allele number; D, deleterious; LP, likely pathogenic; m, maternal; T, tolerated; PosD, possibly damaging; PrD, probably damaging; DC, disease-causing; VUS, variant of unknown significance.
NUP93 transcript used—NM_014669.4, for splice predictions see Figures S1 and S2.
Tools used: Alamut Visual version 2.15 (SOPHiA GENETICS, Lausanne, Switzerland) (including amino acid conservation, SIFT, MutationTaster); Ensembl Variant Effect Predictor (VEP) (PolyPhen, REVEL score, CADD PHRED score, TWINSUK_AF and AC) [52]; EVE score and EVE Class [43]—patient #7 in McCarthy et al. [26]; patient 7 and 7S are siblings; patient 85 included in Bierzynska et al. [25]; patient S013682 included in Turro et al. [28]
Clinical details per patient
| Patient # | Sex | Eth | Age of onset (yr) | Parental consang. | Sporadic/ Familial | Steroid resistance | Histology | Length of follow up | Time to kidney failure (mo) | Post Tx recurrence? | Extra Phenotype |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7 | M | SA | 1 | Yes | F | Primary | c. FSGS | 7 yr (Died at 8yr1mo-Infection, probably CMV pneumonia) | 12 | No | Unknown |
| 7S | F | SA | 1 | Yes | F | Presumed | FSGS | 3.5 yr | 6 | No | Microscopic haematuria |
| 85 | F | C | 6 | No | S | Primary | FSGS | 6 yr | 2 | No | Microscopic haematuria |
| S013682 | M | SA | 2 | Yes | S | Primary | FSGS | 15.5 yr | 7 | Yes | Microscopic haematuria |
| S013282 | M | C | 8 | No | S | Primary | FSGS | 5.5 yr | 12 | No | Autism spectrum disorder, microscopic haematuria |
Eth, ethnicity; M, male; F, female; SA, South Asian; C, Caucasian; F, familial; S, xporadic; consang., consanguinity; mo, months; yr, years; Tx, transplanted; HD, Haemodialysis; FSGS, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis; c. FSGS, collapsing Focal segmental.
Patient 7 previously described in McCarthy et al. [26]. 7S – Sister of patient 7; patient 85 previously described in Bierzynska et al. [25]; patient S013682 included in Turro et al. [28]
Fig. 1NUP93 variants A. Exon structure of human NUP93 cDNA with identified variants. In red: variants found in the UK SRNS cohort, in black: mutations previously described in the literature [10, 11, 21–24, 39, 40]. NUP93 domain structure created with Prosite MyDomains (https://prosite.expasy.org/cgi-bin/prosite/mydomains) [51]. B. NUP93 protein domain structure with variant positions indicated. Tr, transmembrane; C, conservation across evolution of altered amino acids for the 5 missense variants. Alamut Visual version 2.15 (SOPHiA GENETICS, Lausanne, Switzerland)
Fig. 2Electron microscopy images of a kidney biopsy sample from patient 7 and 7S. Left panel shows electron micrographs of kidney biopsy sample from patient 7. There is gross foot process fusion with only a few areas showing intact foot processes. Otherwise, the glomeruli are of normal architecture without evidence of electron dense deposit. There is no significant mesangial thickening and GBMs appear of normal thickness. Right panel shows electron micrographs of kidney biopsy sample from patient 7S. The glomerulus is partly contracted. Endothelial hyperplasia and subendothelial oedema are observed (dashed arrow). In some areas of the GBM there appears to be some lamination and thickening of the basement membrane together with a basketweave-like appearance that is on the epithelial (outside) aspect of the membrane (solid arrow)
Fig. 3NUP93 is crucial for Drosophila pericardial nephrocyte development. (A) Micrographs of the adult Drosophila heart stained with wheat germ agglutinin (WGA, red) and phalloidin (green). The heart tube (HT) of wild-type flies (2 individuals are shown) is flanked by kidney-like nephrocytes (arrows) which preferentially bind WGA. In contrast, fewer nephrocytes are seen in adults when the expression of either NUP93-1 or NUP93-2 is silenced by RNAi using a nephrocyte-restricted driver Dot-Gal4 (arrowheads). Scale bars = 100 µm. 7. (B) Quantified data indicate a significant reduction in nephrocyte numbers in flies where NUP93-1 or NUP93-2 were silenced using either DotGal4 or dKlf15Gal4 drivers, compared to wild type (w1118) or parent lines (DotGal4; dKlf15Gal4; UAS-NUP93-1 RNAi or UAS-NUP92-2 RNAi). n = 22–35 different flies for each genotype. *P < 0.001 compared to w1118 control line. (C) Micrographs show nephrocytes stained with anti-nucleopore protein antibody (mAB 414, red), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA, green; cell membranes) and Hoechst (blue, nucleic acids). Nephrocytes in wild-type flies (in this instance, the driver line outcrossed to w1118) show distinct perinuclear staining of nucleopore proteins (arrow), whereas the nucleus and perinuclear staining for nucleopore proteins is severely disrupted in nephrocytes when NUP93-1 was silenced (arrowhead, dKlf15Gal4 > NUP93-1 RNAi). Scale bar = 20 µm
Fig. 4Electron microscopy of NUP93 mutants and wild type Drosophila nephrocytes. Top panel shows low power sections, bottom panel shows higher power sections. : A collapsed cellular profile with indented margins and large vacuoles abundant in the cytoplasm. Basement membrane is intact with very few fenestrations leading into large interconnecting sub-membranous spaces containing membrane bound inclusions. : An over-inflated cellular profile with large vacuoles abundant in the cytoplasm. Basement membrane is intact with fewer fenestrations than control leading into a well-defined narrow sub-membranous labyrinth. Wild type control: An inflated cellular profile with large vacuoles abundant in the cytoplasm. Basement membrane is intact with abundant fenestrations leading into well-defined narrow sub-membranous labyrinths