A recurrent mutation in the BMP type I receptor ACVR1 causes inherited and sporadic fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva


Autoria(s): Shore, E. M.; Xu, M.; Feldman, G. J.; Fenstermacher, D. A.; Brown, Matthew A.; Kaplan, F. S.
Data(s)

2006

Resumo

Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder of skeletal malformations and progressive extraskeletal ossification. We mapped FOP to chromosome 2q23-24 by linkage analysis and identified an identical heterozygous mutation (617G→A; R206H) in the glycine-serine (GS) activation domain of ACVR1, a BMP type I receptor, in all affected individuals examined. Protein modeling predicts destabilization of the GS domain, consistent with constitutive activation of ACVR1 as the underlying cause of the ectopic chondrogenesis, osteogenesis and joint fusions seen in FOP.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/89477/

Publicador

Nature Publishing Group

Relação

DOI:10.1038/ng1783

Shore, E. M., Xu, M., Feldman, G. J., Fenstermacher, D. A., Brown, Matthew A., & Kaplan, F. S. (2006) A recurrent mutation in the BMP type I receptor ACVR1 causes inherited and sporadic fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva. Nature Genetics, 38(5), pp. 525-527.

Direitos

© 2006 Nature Publishing Group

Fonte

Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation

Palavras-Chave #bone morphogenetic protein #procollagen c proteinase #arthrodesis #article #autosomal dominant disorder #bone malformation #DNA sequence #gene mapping #gene mutation #genome analysis #genotype #human #linkage analysis #ossifying myositis #priority journal #protein domain #protein stability #rare disease #sequence analysis #Activin Receptors #Type I #Amino Acid Sequence #Animals #Chromosomes #Human #Pair 2 #Female #Humans #Male #Molecular Sequence Data #Mutation #Myositis Ossificans #Pedigree #RNA #Messenger #Sequence Homology #Amino Acid
Tipo

Journal Article