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Fam83h null mice support a neomorphic mechanism for human ADHCAI

Truncation mutations in FAM83H (family with sequence similarity 83, member H) cause autosomal dominant hypocalcified amelogenesis imperfecta (ADHCAI), but little is known about FAM83H function and the pathogenesis of ADHCAI. We recruited three ADHCAI families and identified two novel (p.Gln457*; p.L...

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Autores principales: Wang, Shih‐Kai, Hu, Yuanyuan, Yang, Jie, Smith, Charles E., Richardson, Amelia S, Yamakoshi, Yasuo, Lee, Yuan‐Ling, Seymen, Figen, Koruyucu, Mine, Gencay, Koray, Lee, Moses, Choi, Murim, Kim, Jung‐Wook, Hu, Jan C‐C., Simmer, James P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4707031/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26788537
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mgg3.178
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author Wang, Shih‐Kai
Hu, Yuanyuan
Yang, Jie
Smith, Charles E.
Richardson, Amelia S
Yamakoshi, Yasuo
Lee, Yuan‐Ling
Seymen, Figen
Koruyucu, Mine
Gencay, Koray
Lee, Moses
Choi, Murim
Kim, Jung‐Wook
Hu, Jan C‐C.
Simmer, James P.
author_facet Wang, Shih‐Kai
Hu, Yuanyuan
Yang, Jie
Smith, Charles E.
Richardson, Amelia S
Yamakoshi, Yasuo
Lee, Yuan‐Ling
Seymen, Figen
Koruyucu, Mine
Gencay, Koray
Lee, Moses
Choi, Murim
Kim, Jung‐Wook
Hu, Jan C‐C.
Simmer, James P.
author_sort Wang, Shih‐Kai
collection PubMed
description Truncation mutations in FAM83H (family with sequence similarity 83, member H) cause autosomal dominant hypocalcified amelogenesis imperfecta (ADHCAI), but little is known about FAM83H function and the pathogenesis of ADHCAI. We recruited three ADHCAI families and identified two novel (p.Gln457*; p.Lys639*) and one previously documented (p.Q452*) disease‐causing FAM83H mutations. We generated and characterized Fam83h‐knockout/lacZ‐knockin mice. Surprisingly, enamel thickness, density, Knoop hardness, morphology, and prism patterns were similar in Fam83h (+/+), Fam83h (+/−), and Fam83h (−/−) mice. The histology of ameloblasts in all stages of development, in both molars and incisors, was virtually identical in all three genotypes and showed no signs of pathology, although the Fam83h (−/−) mice usually died after 2 weeks and rarely survived to 7 weeks. LacZ expression in the knockin mice was used to report Fam83h expression in the epithelial tissues of many organs, notably in skin and hair follicles, which manifested a disease phenotype. Pull‐down studies determined that FAM83H dimerizes through its N‐terminal phospholipase D‐like (PLD‐like) domain and identified potential FAM83H interacting proteins. Casein kinase 1 (CK1) interacts with the FAM83H PLD‐like domain via an F(270)‐X‐X‐X‐F(274)‐X‐X‐X‐F(278) motif. CK1 can phosphorylate FAM83H in vitro, and many phosphorylation sites were identified in the FAM83H C‐terminus. Truncation of FAM83H alters its subcellular localization and that of CK1. Our results support the conclusion that FAM83H is not necessary for proper dental enamel formation in mice, but may act as a scaffold protein that localizes CK1. ADHCAI is likely caused by gain‐of‐function effects mediated by truncated FAM83H, which potentially mislocalizes CK1 as part of its pathological mechanism.
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spelling pubmed-47070312016-01-19 Fam83h null mice support a neomorphic mechanism for human ADHCAI Wang, Shih‐Kai Hu, Yuanyuan Yang, Jie Smith, Charles E. Richardson, Amelia S Yamakoshi, Yasuo Lee, Yuan‐Ling Seymen, Figen Koruyucu, Mine Gencay, Koray Lee, Moses Choi, Murim Kim, Jung‐Wook Hu, Jan C‐C. Simmer, James P. Mol Genet Genomic Med Original Articles Truncation mutations in FAM83H (family with sequence similarity 83, member H) cause autosomal dominant hypocalcified amelogenesis imperfecta (ADHCAI), but little is known about FAM83H function and the pathogenesis of ADHCAI. We recruited three ADHCAI families and identified two novel (p.Gln457*; p.Lys639*) and one previously documented (p.Q452*) disease‐causing FAM83H mutations. We generated and characterized Fam83h‐knockout/lacZ‐knockin mice. Surprisingly, enamel thickness, density, Knoop hardness, morphology, and prism patterns were similar in Fam83h (+/+), Fam83h (+/−), and Fam83h (−/−) mice. The histology of ameloblasts in all stages of development, in both molars and incisors, was virtually identical in all three genotypes and showed no signs of pathology, although the Fam83h (−/−) mice usually died after 2 weeks and rarely survived to 7 weeks. LacZ expression in the knockin mice was used to report Fam83h expression in the epithelial tissues of many organs, notably in skin and hair follicles, which manifested a disease phenotype. Pull‐down studies determined that FAM83H dimerizes through its N‐terminal phospholipase D‐like (PLD‐like) domain and identified potential FAM83H interacting proteins. Casein kinase 1 (CK1) interacts with the FAM83H PLD‐like domain via an F(270)‐X‐X‐X‐F(274)‐X‐X‐X‐F(278) motif. CK1 can phosphorylate FAM83H in vitro, and many phosphorylation sites were identified in the FAM83H C‐terminus. Truncation of FAM83H alters its subcellular localization and that of CK1. Our results support the conclusion that FAM83H is not necessary for proper dental enamel formation in mice, but may act as a scaffold protein that localizes CK1. ADHCAI is likely caused by gain‐of‐function effects mediated by truncated FAM83H, which potentially mislocalizes CK1 as part of its pathological mechanism. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2015-09-21 /pmc/articles/PMC4707031/ /pubmed/26788537 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mgg3.178 Text en © 2015 The Authors. Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Wang, Shih‐Kai
Hu, Yuanyuan
Yang, Jie
Smith, Charles E.
Richardson, Amelia S
Yamakoshi, Yasuo
Lee, Yuan‐Ling
Seymen, Figen
Koruyucu, Mine
Gencay, Koray
Lee, Moses
Choi, Murim
Kim, Jung‐Wook
Hu, Jan C‐C.
Simmer, James P.
Fam83h null mice support a neomorphic mechanism for human ADHCAI
title Fam83h null mice support a neomorphic mechanism for human ADHCAI
title_full Fam83h null mice support a neomorphic mechanism for human ADHCAI
title_fullStr Fam83h null mice support a neomorphic mechanism for human ADHCAI
title_full_unstemmed Fam83h null mice support a neomorphic mechanism for human ADHCAI
title_short Fam83h null mice support a neomorphic mechanism for human ADHCAI
title_sort fam83h null mice support a neomorphic mechanism for human adhcai
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4707031/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26788537
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mgg3.178
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