Cargando…

Biallelic HEPHL1 variants impair ferroxidase activity and cause an abnormal hair phenotype

Maintenance of the correct redox status of iron is functionally important for critical biological processes. Multicopper ferroxidases play an important role in oxidizing ferrous iron, released from the cells, into ferric iron, which is subsequently distributed by transferrin. Two well-characterized...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sharma, Prashant, Reichert, Marie, Lu, Yan, Markello, Thomas C., Adams, David R., Steinbach, Peter J., Fuqua, Brie K., Parisi, Xenia, Kaler, Stephen G., Vulpe, Christopher D., Anderson, Gregory J., Gahl, William A., Malicdan, May Christine V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6534290/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31125343
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008143
_version_ 1783421381699960832
author Sharma, Prashant
Reichert, Marie
Lu, Yan
Markello, Thomas C.
Adams, David R.
Steinbach, Peter J.
Fuqua, Brie K.
Parisi, Xenia
Kaler, Stephen G.
Vulpe, Christopher D.
Anderson, Gregory J.
Gahl, William A.
Malicdan, May Christine V.
author_facet Sharma, Prashant
Reichert, Marie
Lu, Yan
Markello, Thomas C.
Adams, David R.
Steinbach, Peter J.
Fuqua, Brie K.
Parisi, Xenia
Kaler, Stephen G.
Vulpe, Christopher D.
Anderson, Gregory J.
Gahl, William A.
Malicdan, May Christine V.
author_sort Sharma, Prashant
collection PubMed
description Maintenance of the correct redox status of iron is functionally important for critical biological processes. Multicopper ferroxidases play an important role in oxidizing ferrous iron, released from the cells, into ferric iron, which is subsequently distributed by transferrin. Two well-characterized ferroxidases, ceruloplasmin (CP) and hephaestin (HEPH) facilitate this reaction in different tissues. Recently, a novel ferroxidase, Hephaestin like 1 (HEPHL1), also known as zyklopen, was identified. Here we report a child with compound heterozygous mutations in HEPHL1 (NM_001098672) who presented with abnormal hair (pili torti and trichorrhexis nodosa) and cognitive dysfunction. The maternal missense mutation affected mRNA splicing, leading to skipping of exon 5 and causing an in-frame deletion of 85 amino acids (c.809_1063del; p.Leu271_ala355del). The paternal mutation (c.3176T>C; p.Met1059Thr) changed a highly conserved methionine that is part of a typical type I copper binding site in HEPHL1. We demonstrated that HEPHL1 has ferroxidase activity and that the patient’s two mutations exhibited loss of this ferroxidase activity. Consistent with these findings, the patient’s fibroblasts accumulated intracellular iron and exhibited reduced activity of the copper-dependent enzyme, lysyl oxidase. These results suggest that the patient’s biallelic variants are loss-of-function mutations. Hence, we generated a Hephl1 knockout mouse model that was viable and had curly whiskers, consistent with the hair phenotype in our patient. These results enhance our understanding of the function of HEPHL1 and implicate altered ferroxidase activity in hair growth and hair disorders.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6534290
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-65342902019-06-05 Biallelic HEPHL1 variants impair ferroxidase activity and cause an abnormal hair phenotype Sharma, Prashant Reichert, Marie Lu, Yan Markello, Thomas C. Adams, David R. Steinbach, Peter J. Fuqua, Brie K. Parisi, Xenia Kaler, Stephen G. Vulpe, Christopher D. Anderson, Gregory J. Gahl, William A. Malicdan, May Christine V. PLoS Genet Research Article Maintenance of the correct redox status of iron is functionally important for critical biological processes. Multicopper ferroxidases play an important role in oxidizing ferrous iron, released from the cells, into ferric iron, which is subsequently distributed by transferrin. Two well-characterized ferroxidases, ceruloplasmin (CP) and hephaestin (HEPH) facilitate this reaction in different tissues. Recently, a novel ferroxidase, Hephaestin like 1 (HEPHL1), also known as zyklopen, was identified. Here we report a child with compound heterozygous mutations in HEPHL1 (NM_001098672) who presented with abnormal hair (pili torti and trichorrhexis nodosa) and cognitive dysfunction. The maternal missense mutation affected mRNA splicing, leading to skipping of exon 5 and causing an in-frame deletion of 85 amino acids (c.809_1063del; p.Leu271_ala355del). The paternal mutation (c.3176T>C; p.Met1059Thr) changed a highly conserved methionine that is part of a typical type I copper binding site in HEPHL1. We demonstrated that HEPHL1 has ferroxidase activity and that the patient’s two mutations exhibited loss of this ferroxidase activity. Consistent with these findings, the patient’s fibroblasts accumulated intracellular iron and exhibited reduced activity of the copper-dependent enzyme, lysyl oxidase. These results suggest that the patient’s biallelic variants are loss-of-function mutations. Hence, we generated a Hephl1 knockout mouse model that was viable and had curly whiskers, consistent with the hair phenotype in our patient. These results enhance our understanding of the function of HEPHL1 and implicate altered ferroxidase activity in hair growth and hair disorders. Public Library of Science 2019-05-24 /pmc/articles/PMC6534290/ /pubmed/31125343 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008143 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sharma, Prashant
Reichert, Marie
Lu, Yan
Markello, Thomas C.
Adams, David R.
Steinbach, Peter J.
Fuqua, Brie K.
Parisi, Xenia
Kaler, Stephen G.
Vulpe, Christopher D.
Anderson, Gregory J.
Gahl, William A.
Malicdan, May Christine V.
Biallelic HEPHL1 variants impair ferroxidase activity and cause an abnormal hair phenotype
title Biallelic HEPHL1 variants impair ferroxidase activity and cause an abnormal hair phenotype
title_full Biallelic HEPHL1 variants impair ferroxidase activity and cause an abnormal hair phenotype
title_fullStr Biallelic HEPHL1 variants impair ferroxidase activity and cause an abnormal hair phenotype
title_full_unstemmed Biallelic HEPHL1 variants impair ferroxidase activity and cause an abnormal hair phenotype
title_short Biallelic HEPHL1 variants impair ferroxidase activity and cause an abnormal hair phenotype
title_sort biallelic hephl1 variants impair ferroxidase activity and cause an abnormal hair phenotype
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6534290/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31125343
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008143
work_keys_str_mv AT sharmaprashant biallelichephl1variantsimpairferroxidaseactivityandcauseanabnormalhairphenotype
AT reichertmarie biallelichephl1variantsimpairferroxidaseactivityandcauseanabnormalhairphenotype
AT luyan biallelichephl1variantsimpairferroxidaseactivityandcauseanabnormalhairphenotype
AT markellothomasc biallelichephl1variantsimpairferroxidaseactivityandcauseanabnormalhairphenotype
AT adamsdavidr biallelichephl1variantsimpairferroxidaseactivityandcauseanabnormalhairphenotype
AT steinbachpeterj biallelichephl1variantsimpairferroxidaseactivityandcauseanabnormalhairphenotype
AT fuquabriek biallelichephl1variantsimpairferroxidaseactivityandcauseanabnormalhairphenotype
AT parisixenia biallelichephl1variantsimpairferroxidaseactivityandcauseanabnormalhairphenotype
AT kalerstepheng biallelichephl1variantsimpairferroxidaseactivityandcauseanabnormalhairphenotype
AT vulpechristopherd biallelichephl1variantsimpairferroxidaseactivityandcauseanabnormalhairphenotype
AT andersongregoryj biallelichephl1variantsimpairferroxidaseactivityandcauseanabnormalhairphenotype
AT gahlwilliama biallelichephl1variantsimpairferroxidaseactivityandcauseanabnormalhairphenotype
AT malicdanmaychristinev biallelichephl1variantsimpairferroxidaseactivityandcauseanabnormalhairphenotype