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Papillorenal Syndrome-Causing Missense Mutations in PAX2/Pax2 Result in Hypomorphic Alleles in Mouse and Human

Papillorenal syndrome (PRS, also known as renal-coloboma syndrome) is an autosomal dominant disease characterized by potentially-blinding congenital optic nerve excavation and congenital kidney abnormalities. Many patients with PRS have mutations in the paired box transcription factor gene, PAX2. Al...

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Autores principales: Alur, Ramakrishna P., Vijayasarathy, Camasamudram, Brown, Jacob D., Mehtani, Mohit, Onojafe, Ighovie F., Sergeev, Yuri V., Boobalan, Elangovan, Jones, MaryPat, Tang, Ke, Liu, Haiquan, Xia, Chun-hong, Gong, Xiaohua, Brooks, Brian P.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2832668/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20221250
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000870
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author Alur, Ramakrishna P.
Vijayasarathy, Camasamudram
Brown, Jacob D.
Mehtani, Mohit
Onojafe, Ighovie F.
Sergeev, Yuri V.
Boobalan, Elangovan
Jones, MaryPat
Tang, Ke
Liu, Haiquan
Xia, Chun-hong
Gong, Xiaohua
Brooks, Brian P.
author_facet Alur, Ramakrishna P.
Vijayasarathy, Camasamudram
Brown, Jacob D.
Mehtani, Mohit
Onojafe, Ighovie F.
Sergeev, Yuri V.
Boobalan, Elangovan
Jones, MaryPat
Tang, Ke
Liu, Haiquan
Xia, Chun-hong
Gong, Xiaohua
Brooks, Brian P.
author_sort Alur, Ramakrishna P.
collection PubMed
description Papillorenal syndrome (PRS, also known as renal-coloboma syndrome) is an autosomal dominant disease characterized by potentially-blinding congenital optic nerve excavation and congenital kidney abnormalities. Many patients with PRS have mutations in the paired box transcription factor gene, PAX2. Although most mutations in PAX2 are predicted to result in complete loss of one allele's function, three missense mutations have been reported, raising the possibility that more subtle alterations in PAX2 function may be disease-causing. To date, the molecular behaviors of these mutations have not been explored. We describe a novel mouse model of PRS due to a missense mutation in a highly-conserved threonine residue in the paired domain of Pax2 (p.T74A) that recapitulates the ocular and kidney findings of patients. This mutation is in the Pax2 paired domain at the same location as two human missense mutations. We show that all three missense mutations disrupt potentially critical hydrogen bonds in atomic models and result in reduced Pax2 transactivation, but do not affect nuclear localization, steady state mRNA levels, or the ability of Pax2 to bind its DNA consensus sequence. Moreover, these mutations show reduced steady-state levels of Pax2 protein in vitro and (for p.T74A) in vivo, likely by reducing protein stability. These results suggest that hypomorphic alleles of PAX2/Pax2 can lead to significant disease in humans and mice.
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spelling pubmed-28326682010-03-11 Papillorenal Syndrome-Causing Missense Mutations in PAX2/Pax2 Result in Hypomorphic Alleles in Mouse and Human Alur, Ramakrishna P. Vijayasarathy, Camasamudram Brown, Jacob D. Mehtani, Mohit Onojafe, Ighovie F. Sergeev, Yuri V. Boobalan, Elangovan Jones, MaryPat Tang, Ke Liu, Haiquan Xia, Chun-hong Gong, Xiaohua Brooks, Brian P. PLoS Genet Research Article Papillorenal syndrome (PRS, also known as renal-coloboma syndrome) is an autosomal dominant disease characterized by potentially-blinding congenital optic nerve excavation and congenital kidney abnormalities. Many patients with PRS have mutations in the paired box transcription factor gene, PAX2. Although most mutations in PAX2 are predicted to result in complete loss of one allele's function, three missense mutations have been reported, raising the possibility that more subtle alterations in PAX2 function may be disease-causing. To date, the molecular behaviors of these mutations have not been explored. We describe a novel mouse model of PRS due to a missense mutation in a highly-conserved threonine residue in the paired domain of Pax2 (p.T74A) that recapitulates the ocular and kidney findings of patients. This mutation is in the Pax2 paired domain at the same location as two human missense mutations. We show that all three missense mutations disrupt potentially critical hydrogen bonds in atomic models and result in reduced Pax2 transactivation, but do not affect nuclear localization, steady state mRNA levels, or the ability of Pax2 to bind its DNA consensus sequence. Moreover, these mutations show reduced steady-state levels of Pax2 protein in vitro and (for p.T74A) in vivo, likely by reducing protein stability. These results suggest that hypomorphic alleles of PAX2/Pax2 can lead to significant disease in humans and mice. Public Library of Science 2010-03-05 /pmc/articles/PMC2832668/ /pubmed/20221250 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000870 Text en This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Alur, Ramakrishna P.
Vijayasarathy, Camasamudram
Brown, Jacob D.
Mehtani, Mohit
Onojafe, Ighovie F.
Sergeev, Yuri V.
Boobalan, Elangovan
Jones, MaryPat
Tang, Ke
Liu, Haiquan
Xia, Chun-hong
Gong, Xiaohua
Brooks, Brian P.
Papillorenal Syndrome-Causing Missense Mutations in PAX2/Pax2 Result in Hypomorphic Alleles in Mouse and Human
title Papillorenal Syndrome-Causing Missense Mutations in PAX2/Pax2 Result in Hypomorphic Alleles in Mouse and Human
title_full Papillorenal Syndrome-Causing Missense Mutations in PAX2/Pax2 Result in Hypomorphic Alleles in Mouse and Human
title_fullStr Papillorenal Syndrome-Causing Missense Mutations in PAX2/Pax2 Result in Hypomorphic Alleles in Mouse and Human
title_full_unstemmed Papillorenal Syndrome-Causing Missense Mutations in PAX2/Pax2 Result in Hypomorphic Alleles in Mouse and Human
title_short Papillorenal Syndrome-Causing Missense Mutations in PAX2/Pax2 Result in Hypomorphic Alleles in Mouse and Human
title_sort papillorenal syndrome-causing missense mutations in pax2/pax2 result in hypomorphic alleles in mouse and human
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2832668/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20221250
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000870
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