A pathogenic variant of TULP3 causes renal and hepatic fibrocystic disease

Patient variants in have recently been associated with progressive fibrocystic disease in tissues and organs. TULP3 is a ciliary trafficking protein that links membrane-associated proteins to the intraflagellar transport complex A. In mice, mutations in Tulp3 drive phenotypes consistent with ciliary...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in genetics 2022-10, Vol.13, p.1021037
Hauptverfasser: Jafari Khamirani, Hossein, Palicharla, Vivek Reddy, Dastgheib, Seyed Alireza, Dianatpour, Mehdi, Imanieh, Mohammad Hadi, Tabei, Seyed Sajjad, Besse, Whitney, Mukhopadhyay, Saikat, Liem, Jr, Karel F
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Patient variants in have recently been associated with progressive fibrocystic disease in tissues and organs. TULP3 is a ciliary trafficking protein that links membrane-associated proteins to the intraflagellar transport complex A. In mice, mutations in Tulp3 drive phenotypes consistent with ciliary dysfunction which include renal cystic disease, as part of a ciliopathic spectrum. Here we report two sisters from consanguineous parents with fibrocystic renal and hepatic disease harboring a homozygous missense mutation in (NM_003324.5: c.1144C>T, p.Arg382Trp). The R382W patient mutation resides within the C-terminal Tubby domain, a conserved domain required for TULP3 to associate with phosphoinositides. We show that inner medullary collecting duct-3 cells expressing the TULP3 R382W patient variant have a severely reduced ability to localize the membrane-associated proteins ARL13b, INPP5E, and GPR161 to the cilium, consistent with a loss of TULP3 function. These studies establish Arginine 382 as a critical residue in the Tubby domain, which is essential for TULP3-mediated protein trafficking within the cilium, and expand the phenotypic spectrum known to result from recessive deleterious mutations in .
ISSN:1664-8021
1664-8021
DOI:10.3389/fgene.2022.1021037