Individuals with mutations in XPNPEP3, which encodes a mitochondrial protein, develop a nephronophthisis-like nephropathy.


Autoria(s): O'Toole, JF; Liu, Y; Davis, EE; Westlake, CJ; Attanasio, M; Otto, EA; Seelow, D; Nurnberg, G; Becker, C; Nuutinen, M; Kärppä, M; Ignatius, J; Uusimaa, J; Pakanen, S; Jaakkola, E; van den Heuvel, LP; Fehrenbach, H; Wiggins, R; Goyal, M; Zhou, W; Wolf, MT; Wise, E; Helou, J; Allen, SJ; Murga-Zamalloa, CA; Ashraf, S; Chaki, M; Heeringa, S; Chernin, G; Hoskins, BE; Chaib, H; Gleeson, J; Kusakabe, T; Suzuki, T; Isaac, RE; Quarmby, LM; Tennant, B; Fujioka, H; Tuominen, H; Hassinen, I; Lohi, H; van Houten, JL; Rotig, A; Sayer, JA; Rolinski, B; Freisinger, P; Madhavan, SM; Herzer, M; Madignier, F; Prokisch, H; Nurnberg, P; Jackson, PK; Khanna, H; Katsanis, N; Hildebrandt, F
Data(s)

01/03/2010

Formato

791 - 802

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20179356

40076

J Clin Invest, 2010, 120 (3), pp. 791 - 802

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/4325

1558-8238

Idioma(s)

ENG

en_US

Relação

J Clin Invest

10.1172/JCI40076

Journal of Clinical Investigation

Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

The autosomal recessive kidney disease nephronophthisis (NPHP) constitutes the most frequent genetic cause of terminal renal failure in the first 3 decades of life. Ten causative genes (NPHP1-NPHP9 and NPHP11), whose products localize to the primary cilia-centrosome complex, support the unifying concept that cystic kidney diseases are "ciliopathies". Using genome-wide homozygosity mapping, we report here what we believe to be a new locus (NPHP-like 1 [NPHPL1]) for an NPHP-like nephropathy. In 2 families with an NPHP-like phenotype, we detected homozygous frameshift and splice-site mutations, respectively, in the X-prolyl aminopeptidase 3 (XPNPEP3) gene. In contrast to all known NPHP proteins, XPNPEP3 localizes to mitochondria of renal cells. However, in vivo analyses also revealed a likely cilia-related function; suppression of zebrafish xpnpep3 phenocopied the developmental phenotypes of ciliopathy morphants, and this effect was rescued by human XPNPEP3 that was devoid of a mitochondrial localization signal. Consistent with a role for XPNPEP3 in ciliary function, several ciliary cystogenic proteins were found to be XPNPEP3 substrates, for which resistance to N-terminal proline cleavage resulted in attenuated protein function in vivo in zebrafish. Our data highlight an emerging link between mitochondria and ciliary dysfunction, and suggest that further understanding the enzymatic activity and substrates of XPNPEP3 will illuminate novel cystogenic pathways.

Palavras-Chave #Aminopeptidases #Animals #Centrosome #Chromosome Mapping #Cilia #Family #Female #Genetic Diseases, Inborn #Genome-Wide Association Study #Humans #Kidney #Male #Mitochondria #Mitochondrial Proteins #Rats #Rats, Sprague-Dawley #Renal Insufficiency #Zebrafish