Familial tumoral calcinosis (FTC; OMIM 211900) is a severe autosomal recessive metabolic disorder that manifests with hyperphosphatemia and massive calcium deposits in the skin and subcutaneous tissues. Using linkage analysis, we mapped the gene underlying FTC to 2q24-q31. This region includes the gene GALNT3, which encodes a glycosyltransferase responsible for initiating mucin-type O-glycosylation. Sequence analysis of GALNT3 identified biallelic deleterious mutations in all individuals with FTC, suggesting that defective post-translational modification underlies the disease.We assessed 12 individuals with FTC from two large kindreds of Druze and African-American origin (Fig. 1a) that have been extensively described 1,2 . All affected individuals reported recurrent painful, calcified subcutaneous masses of up to 1 kg (Fig. 1b), often resulting in secondary infection and incapacitating mutilation. Three individuals developed deep periarticular tumors (Fig. 1b), and one succumbed to the disease. All affected individuals had hyperphosphatemia (family 1, 6.2-8.5 mg dl -1 ; family 2, 5.2-6.6 mg dl -1 ) but normal levels of calcium, parathyroid hormone (PTH) and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3.With informed consent of all participants, we obtained DNA samples and carried out a genome-wide scan using 362 microsatellite markers (Research Genetics) in family 1. Consanguinity in this kindred allowed us to apply homozygosity mapping to identify in all affected individuals a 15-Mb segment identical by descent, flanked by D2S142 and D2S2284/D2S2177 on 2q24-q31 (Fig. 1). We obtained a maximum multipoint lod score of 6.7 (HOMOZ 3 ). Multipoint linkage analysis in family 2 using seven markers in this critical region further reduced the interval to 3 Mb flanked by D2S111 and D2S1776 (Fig. 1) and yielded a maximum multipoint lod score of 3.4 (GeneHunter 4 ).Using Mapviewer, we identified 11 genes in the 3-Mb region associated with FTC. Of these, B3GALT1, SCN7A, SCN9A, SCN1A and STK39 have roles in neural or neuroendocrine tissues; the functions of TAIP-2, CMYA3, FLJ11457, LOC90643 and LASS6 are mostly unknown. The last positional candidate gene, GALNT3, encodes the UDP-N-acetyl-alpha-D-galactosamine:polypeptide N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase 3 (ppGaNTase-T3; ref. 5). ppGaNTase-T3 belongs to a large family of Golgi-associated biosynthetic enzymes that transfer GalNac from the sugar donor UDP-GalNac to serine and threonine residues and are thereby responsible for initiating O-glycan synthesis, a prevalent form of post-translational modification 6 . RT-PCR analysis showed strong expression of GALNT3 in the skin and kidneys, two tissues of functional relevance to the pathogenesis of FTC 1,2 (Fig. 2a). Using balanced primer pairs, we screened PCR amplicons of all ten coding exons and conserved splice sites of GALNT3 for pathogenic mutations in the genomic DNA of affected individuals (primer pairs and PCR conditions are available on request). Members of the Druze family carried a homozygous G→A transition at position 1524+1 (from the ATG ...
Taurine transport undergoes an adaptive response to changes in taurine availability. Unlike most amino acids, taurine is not metabolized or incorporated into protein but remains free in the intracellular water. Most amino acids are reabsorbed at rates of 98-99%, but reabsorption of taurine may range from 40% to 99.5%. Factors that influence taurine accumulation include ionic environment, electrochemical charge, and post-translational and transcriptional factors. Among these are protein kinase C (PKC) activation and transactivation or repression by proto-oncogenes such as WT1, c-Jun, c-Myb and p53. Renal adaptive regulation of the taurine transporter (TauT) was studied in vivo and in vitro. Site-directed mutagenesis and the oocyte expression system were used to study post-translational regulation of the TauT by PKC. Reporter genes and Northern and Western blots were used to study transcriptional regulation of the taurine transporter gene (TauT). We demonstrated that (i) the body pool of taurine is controlled through renal adaptive regulation of TauT in response to taurine availability; (ii) ionic environment, electrochemical charge, pH, and developmental ontogeny influence renal taurine accumulation; (iii) the fourth segment of TauT is involved in the gating of taurine across the cell membrane, which is controlled by PKC phosphorylation of serine 322 at the post-translational level; (iv) expression of TauT is repressed by the p53 tumour suppressor gene and is transactivated by proto-oncogenes such as WT1, c-Jun, and c-Myb; and (v) over-expression of TauT protects renal cells from cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity.
Our findings demonstrate intrafamilial heterogeneity, namely the presence of GS and CBS phenotypes, in a kindred with the CLCNKB R438H mutation. We conclude that GS can be caused by a mutation in a gene other than SLC12A3. The exact role of the CLCNKB R438H mutation in the pathogenesis of the electrolyte and mineral abnormalities in GS and CBS remains to be established.
We describe two siblings from a consanguineous family with autosomal recessive Fanconi's syndrome and hypophosphatemic rickets. Genetic analysis revealed a homozygous in-frame duplication of 21 bp in SLC34A1, which encodes the renal sodium-inorganic phosphate cotransporter NaPi-IIa, as the causative mutation. Functional studies in Xenopus laevis oocytes and in opossum kidney cells indicated complete loss of function of the mutant NaPi-IIa, resulting from failure of the transporter to reach the plasma membrane. These findings show that disruption of the human NaPi-IIa profoundly impairs overall renal phosphate reabsorption and proximal-tubule function and provide evidence of the critical role of NaPi-IIa in human renal phosphate handling.
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