Mutations in IFT-A satellite core component genes and produce short rib polydactyly syndrome with distinctive campomelia.

TitleMutations in IFT-A satellite core component genes and produce short rib polydactyly syndrome with distinctive campomelia.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsDuran, I, S Taylor, P, Zhang, W, Martin, J, Qureshi, F, Jacques, SM, Wallerstein, R, Lachman, RS, Nickerson, DA, Bamshad, M, Cohn, DH, Krakow, D
JournalCilia
Volume6
Pagination7
Date Published2017
ISSN2046-2530
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Skeletal ciliopathies comprise a spectrum of ciliary malfunction disorders that have a profound effect on the skeleton. Most common among these disorders is short rib polydactyly syndrome (SRPS), a recessively inherited perinatal lethal condition characterized by a long narrow chest, markedly shortened long bones, polydactyly and, often, multi-organ system involvement. SRPS shows extensive locus heterogeneity with mutations in genes encoding proteins that participate in cilia formation and/or function.

RESULTS: Herein we describe mutations in , a satellite member of the retrograde IFT-A complex, that produce a form of SRPS with unusual bending of the ribs and appendicular bones. These newly described mutations disrupted cilia formation, produced abnormalities in cartilage growth plate architecture thus contributing to altered endochondral ossification. We further show that the SRPS phenotype is similar to SRPS resulting from mutations in the gene encoding IFT121 (WDR35), a direct interactor with IFT43.

CONCLUSIONS: This study defines a new -associated phenotype, identifying an additional locus for SRPS. The data demonstrate that IFT43 is essential for ciliogenesis and that the mutations disrupted the orderly proliferation and differentiation of growth plate chondrocytes, resulting in a severe effect on endochondral ossification and mineralization. Phenotypic similarities with SRPS cases resulting from mutations in the gene encoding the IFT43 direct interacting protein IFT121 suggests that similar mechanisms may be disrupted by defects in these two IFT-A satellite interactors.

DOI10.1186/s13630-017-0051-y
Alternate JournalCilia
PubMed ID28400947
PubMed Central IDPMC5387211
Grant ListUM1 HG006493 / HG / NHGRI NIH HHS / United States