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Expression and In Vivo Rescue of Human ABCC6 Disease-Causing Mutants in Mouse Liver

Loss-of-function mutations in ABCC6 can cause chronic or acute forms of dystrophic mineralization described in disease models such as pseudoxanthoma elasticum (OMIM 26480) in human and dystrophic cardiac calcification in mice. The ABCC6 protein is a large membrane-embedded organic anion transporter...

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Autores principales: Le Saux, Olivier, Fülöp, Krisztina, Yamaguchi, Yukiko, Iliás, Attila, Szabó, Zalán, Brampton, Christopher N., Pomozi, Viola, Huszár, Krisztina, Arányi, Tamás, Váradi, András
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3173462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21935449
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0024738
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author Le Saux, Olivier
Fülöp, Krisztina
Yamaguchi, Yukiko
Iliás, Attila
Szabó, Zalán
Brampton, Christopher N.
Pomozi, Viola
Huszár, Krisztina
Arányi, Tamás
Váradi, András
author_facet Le Saux, Olivier
Fülöp, Krisztina
Yamaguchi, Yukiko
Iliás, Attila
Szabó, Zalán
Brampton, Christopher N.
Pomozi, Viola
Huszár, Krisztina
Arányi, Tamás
Váradi, András
author_sort Le Saux, Olivier
collection PubMed
description Loss-of-function mutations in ABCC6 can cause chronic or acute forms of dystrophic mineralization described in disease models such as pseudoxanthoma elasticum (OMIM 26480) in human and dystrophic cardiac calcification in mice. The ABCC6 protein is a large membrane-embedded organic anion transporter primarily found in the plasma membrane of hepatocytes. We have established a complex experimental strategy to determine the structural and functional consequences of disease-causing mutations in the human ABCC6. The major aim of our study was to identify mutants with preserved transport activity but failure in intracellular targeting. Five missense mutations were investigated: R1138Q, V1298F, R1314W, G1321S and R1339C. Using in vitro assays, we have identified two variants; R1138Q and R1314W that retained significant transport activity. All mutants were transiently expressed in vivo, in mouse liver via hydrodynamic tail vein injections. The inactive V1298F was the only mutant that showed normal cellular localization in liver hepatocytes while the other mutants showed mostly intracellular accumulation indicating abnormal trafficking. As both R1138Q and R1314W displayed endoplasmic reticulum localization, we tested whether 4-phenylbutyrate (4-PBA), a drug approved for clinical use, could restore their intracellular trafficking to the plasma membrane in MDCKII and mouse liver. The cellular localization of R1314W was significantly improved by 4-PBA treatment, thus potentially rescuing its physiological function. Our work demonstrates the feasibility of the in vivo rescue of cellular maturation of some ABCC6 mutants in physiological conditions very similar to the biology of the fully differentiated human liver and could have future human therapeutic application.
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spelling pubmed-31734622011-09-20 Expression and In Vivo Rescue of Human ABCC6 Disease-Causing Mutants in Mouse Liver Le Saux, Olivier Fülöp, Krisztina Yamaguchi, Yukiko Iliás, Attila Szabó, Zalán Brampton, Christopher N. Pomozi, Viola Huszár, Krisztina Arányi, Tamás Váradi, András PLoS One Research Article Loss-of-function mutations in ABCC6 can cause chronic or acute forms of dystrophic mineralization described in disease models such as pseudoxanthoma elasticum (OMIM 26480) in human and dystrophic cardiac calcification in mice. The ABCC6 protein is a large membrane-embedded organic anion transporter primarily found in the plasma membrane of hepatocytes. We have established a complex experimental strategy to determine the structural and functional consequences of disease-causing mutations in the human ABCC6. The major aim of our study was to identify mutants with preserved transport activity but failure in intracellular targeting. Five missense mutations were investigated: R1138Q, V1298F, R1314W, G1321S and R1339C. Using in vitro assays, we have identified two variants; R1138Q and R1314W that retained significant transport activity. All mutants were transiently expressed in vivo, in mouse liver via hydrodynamic tail vein injections. The inactive V1298F was the only mutant that showed normal cellular localization in liver hepatocytes while the other mutants showed mostly intracellular accumulation indicating abnormal trafficking. As both R1138Q and R1314W displayed endoplasmic reticulum localization, we tested whether 4-phenylbutyrate (4-PBA), a drug approved for clinical use, could restore their intracellular trafficking to the plasma membrane in MDCKII and mouse liver. The cellular localization of R1314W was significantly improved by 4-PBA treatment, thus potentially rescuing its physiological function. Our work demonstrates the feasibility of the in vivo rescue of cellular maturation of some ABCC6 mutants in physiological conditions very similar to the biology of the fully differentiated human liver and could have future human therapeutic application. Public Library of Science 2011-09-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3173462/ /pubmed/21935449 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0024738 Text en Le Saux et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Le Saux, Olivier
Fülöp, Krisztina
Yamaguchi, Yukiko
Iliás, Attila
Szabó, Zalán
Brampton, Christopher N.
Pomozi, Viola
Huszár, Krisztina
Arányi, Tamás
Váradi, András
Expression and In Vivo Rescue of Human ABCC6 Disease-Causing Mutants in Mouse Liver
title Expression and In Vivo Rescue of Human ABCC6 Disease-Causing Mutants in Mouse Liver
title_full Expression and In Vivo Rescue of Human ABCC6 Disease-Causing Mutants in Mouse Liver
title_fullStr Expression and In Vivo Rescue of Human ABCC6 Disease-Causing Mutants in Mouse Liver
title_full_unstemmed Expression and In Vivo Rescue of Human ABCC6 Disease-Causing Mutants in Mouse Liver
title_short Expression and In Vivo Rescue of Human ABCC6 Disease-Causing Mutants in Mouse Liver
title_sort expression and in vivo rescue of human abcc6 disease-causing mutants in mouse liver
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3173462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21935449
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0024738
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