Compound heterozygous mutations in RIPPLY2 associated with vertebral segmentation defects


Autoria(s): McInerney-Leo, A.M.; Sparrow, D.B.; Harris, J.E.; Gardiner, B.B.; Marshall, M.S.; O'Reilly, V.C.; Shi, H.; Brown, M.A.; Leo, P.J.; Zankl, A.; Dunwoodie, S.L.; Duncan, E.L.
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

Segmentation defects of the vertebrae (SDV) are caused by aberrant somite formation during embryogenesis and result in irregular formation of the vertebrae and ribs. The Notch signal transduction pathway plays a critical role in somite formation and patterning in model vertebrates. In humans, mutations in several genes involved in the Notch pathway are associated with SDV, with both autosomal recessive (MESP2, DLL3, LFNG, HES7) and autosomal dominant (TBX6) inheritance. However, many individuals with SDV do not carry mutations in these genes. Using whole-exome capture and massive parallel sequencing, we identified compound heterozygous mutations in RIPPLY2 in two brothers with multiple regional SDV, with appropriate familial segregation. One novel mutation (c.A238T:p.Arg80*) introduces a premature stop codon. In transiently transfected C2C12 mouse myoblasts, the RIPPLY2 mutant protein demonstrated impaired transcriptional repression activity compared with wild-type RIPPLY2 despite similar levels of expression. The other mutation (c.240-4T>G), with minor allele frequency <0.002, lies in the highly conserved splice site consensus sequence 5' to the terminal exon. Ripply2 has a well-established role in somitogenesis and vertebral column formation, interacting at both gene and protein levels with SDV-associated Mesp2 and Tbx6. We conclude that compound heterozygous mutations in RIPPLY2 are associated with SDV, a new gene for this condition. © The Author 2014.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/94185/

Publicador

Oxford University Press

Relação

DOI:10.1093/hmg/ddu534

McInerney-Leo, A.M., Sparrow, D.B., Harris, J.E., Gardiner, B.B., Marshall, M.S., O'Reilly, V.C., Shi, H., Brown, M.A., Leo, P.J., Zankl, A., Dunwoodie, S.L., & Duncan, E.L. (2015) Compound heterozygous mutations in RIPPLY2 associated with vertebral segmentation defects. Human Molecular Genetics, 24(5), pp. 1234-1242.

http://purl.org/au-research/grants/NHMRC/ID1044543

Direitos

Copyright 2015 Oxford University Press

Fonte

Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation

Palavras-Chave #mutant protein #RIPPLY2 protein #unclassified drug #basic helix loop helix transcription factor #Mesp2 protein #mouse #repressor protein #Ripply2 protein #mouse #stop codon #Tbx6 protein #mouse #transcription factor #animal experiment #Article #autosomal dominant inheritance #consensus sequence #controlled study #defense mechanism #female #gene frequency #gene interaction #gene mutation #gene sequence #genetic association #human #male #molecular cloning #mouse #nonhuman #priority journal #protein protein interaction #segmentation defect of the vertebrae #signal transduction #spine disease #animal #bone dysplasia #C57BL mouse #cell culture #disease model #exome #exon #genetics #heterozygote #high throughput sequencing #knockout mouse #metabolism #mutation #nucleotide sequence #pathology #pedigree #quantitative trait #RNA splicing #somite #spine #Vertebrata #Animals #Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors #Bone Diseases #Developmental #Cells #Cultured #Codon #Nonsense #Disease Models #Animal #DNA Mutational Analysis #Exons #High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing #Mice #Mice #Inbred C57BL #Mice #Knockout #Mutant Proteins #Quantitative Trait #Heritable #Repressor Proteins #Somites #Transcription Factors
Tipo

Journal Article