ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe
ClinVar: |
c.3892G>T
,
p.Val1298Phe
D
, Pathogenic
|
LOVD-ABCC6: |
p.Val1298Phe
D
|
Predicted by SNAP2: | A: D (91%), C: D (71%), D: D (95%), E: D (95%), F: D (63%), G: D (95%), H: D (95%), I: D (91%), K: D (95%), L: D (95%), M: D (95%), N: D (95%), P: D (95%), Q: D (95%), R: D (95%), S: D (95%), T: D (85%), W: D (95%), Y: D (95%), |
Predicted by PROVEAN: | A: D, C: D, D: D, E: D, F: D, G: D, H: D, I: N, K: D, L: N, M: N, N: D, P: D, Q: D, R: D, S: D, T: D, W: D, Y: D, |
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[hide] The MRP-related and BCRP/ABCG2 multidrug resistanc... Curr Drug Metab. 2004 Feb;5(1):21-53. Haimeur A, Conseil G, Deeley RG, Cole SP
The MRP-related and BCRP/ABCG2 multidrug resistance proteins: biology, substrate specificity and regulation.
Curr Drug Metab. 2004 Feb;5(1):21-53., [PMID:14965249]
Abstract [show]
Several members of different families of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) superfamily of transport proteins are capable of transporting an extraordinarily structurally diverse array of endo- and xenobiotics and their metabolites across cell membranes. Together, these transporters play an important role in the absorption, disposition and elimination of these chemicals in the body. In tumor cells, increased expression of these drug transporters is associated with resistance to multiple chemotherapeutic agents. In this review, current knowledge of the biochemical, physiological and pharmacological properties of nine members of the multidrug resistance protein (MRP)-related ABCC family (MRP1, MRP2, MRP3, MRP4, MRP5, MRP6, MRP7, ABCC11 and ABCC12) as well as the G family member, ABCG2/BCRP, are summarized. A focus is placed on the structural similarities and differences of these drug transporters as well as the molecular determinants of their substrate specificities and transport activities. Factors that regulate expression of the MRP-related proteins and ABCG2/BCRP are also reviewed.
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No. Sentence Comment
555 Three missense NBD2 MRP6 mutants (Val1298Phe, Gly1302Arg and Gly1321Ser) found in PXE patients were recently shown by in vitro studies to exhibit normal levels of MgATP binding although transport of GSH conjugated organic anion substrates, including LTC4, wasnot detectable [352].
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 14965249:555:34
status: NEW557 Although their MgATP binding properties were comparable to those of wild-type MRP6, two of the mutant proteins (Val1298Phe and Gly1321Arg) could not be labeled with 8-azido-[α-32P]ATP in the presence of vanadate under nucleotide-trapping conditions.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 14965249:557:112
status: NEW[hide] Polymorphisms of MRP1 (ABCC1) and related ATP-depe... Pharmacogenet Genomics. 2005 Aug;15(8):523-33. Conseil G, Deeley RG, Cole SP
Polymorphisms of MRP1 (ABCC1) and related ATP-dependent drug transporters.
Pharmacogenet Genomics. 2005 Aug;15(8):523-33., [PMID:16006996]
Abstract [show]
Genetic variations in drug metabolizing enzymes and targets are established determinants of adverse drug reactions and interactions, but less is known about the role of genetic polymorphisms in membrane transport proteins. MRP1 (ABCC1) is one of 13 polytopic membrane proteins that comprise the 'C' subfamily of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) superfamily of transport proteins. MRP1 and related ABCC family members, including MRP2, 3, 4 and 5 (ABCC2, 3, 4 and 5), each have a distinctive pattern of tissue expression and substrate specificity. Together, these five transporters play important roles in the disposition and elimination of drugs and other organic anions, and in maintenance of blood-tissue barriers, as confirmed by enhanced chemosensitivity of respective knockout mice. Moreover, Mrp2 (Abcc2) deficient animals display mild conjugated hyperbilirubinemia, corresponding to a human condition known as Dubin-Johnson syndrome (DJS). Naturally occurring mutations in MRP/ABCC-related drug transporters have been reported, some of which are non-synonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms. The consequences of the resulting amino acid changes can sometimes be predicted from in vitro site-directed mutagenesis studies or from knowledge of mutations of analogous (conserved) residues in ABCC proteins that cause DJS, Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (ABCC6), cystic fibrosis (CFTR/ABCC7) or persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy (SUR1/ABCC8). Continual updating of databases of sequence variants and haplotype analysis, together with in vitro biochemical validation assays and pharmacological studies in knockout animals, should make it possible to determine how genetic variation in the MRP-related transporters contributes to the range of responses to drugs and chemicals observed in different human populations.
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No. Sentence Comment
56 In the kidney, glomeruli and distal collecting tubules express MRP1, and, in the brain, MRP1 appears to form part of the drug permeability barrier Fig. 1 CF (CFTR/ABCC7) Q1291R E1228G Q1238R G1244E/V G1247R G1249R S1251N S1255P/L W1282G/R/C R1283K/M N1303K Y1307C E1321Q K1351E Q1352H R1268Q V1298F T1301I G1302R A1303P R1314W/Q G1321S R1339C Q1347H I1350L G1354R D1361N Q1382R A1450T R1347E R1351P V1359G/M S1368A G1377R G1382S R1392H R1419C R1435Q G1477R G1479R R1492W E1505K DJS (MRP2/ABCC2) NBD1 NBD2 COOH MEMBRANE MSD MSD MSD 12131415161710116 7 8 91 23 4 5TM H2 N Extracellular Intracellular PXE (ABCC6) PHHI (SUR1/ABCC8) Two-dimensional structure of MRP-related proteins.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 16006996:56:292
status: NEW[hide] A spectrum of ABCC6 mutations is responsible for p... Am J Hum Genet. 2001 Oct;69(4):749-64. Epub 2001 Aug 31. Le Saux O, Beck K, Sachsinger C, Silvestri C, Treiber C, Goring HH, Johnson EW, De Paepe A, Pope FM, Pasquali-Ronchetti I, Bercovitch L, Marais AS, Viljoen DL, Terry SF, Boyd CD
A spectrum of ABCC6 mutations is responsible for pseudoxanthoma elasticum.
Am J Hum Genet. 2001 Oct;69(4):749-64. Epub 2001 Aug 31., [PMID:11536079]
Abstract [show]
To better understand the pathogenetics of pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE), we performed a mutational analysis of ATP-binding cassette subfamily C member 6 (ABCC6) in 122 unrelated patients with PXE, the largest cohort of patients yet studied. Thirty-six mutations were characterized, and, among these, 28 were novel variants (for a total of 43 PXE mutations known to date). Twenty-one alleles were missense variants, six were small insertions or deletions, five were nonsense, two were alleles likely to result in aberrant mRNA splicing, and two were large deletions involving ABCC6. Although most mutations appeared to be unique variants, two disease-causing alleles occurred frequently in apparently unrelated individuals. R1141X was found in our patient cohort at a frequency of 18.8% and was preponderant in European patients. ABCC6del23-29 occurred at a frequency of 12.9% and was prevalent in patients from the United States. These results suggested that R1141X and ABCC6del23-29 might have been derived regionally from founder alleles. Putative disease-causing mutations were identified in approximately 64% of the 244 chromosomes studied, and 85.2% of the 122 patients were found to have at least one disease-causing allele. Our results suggest that a fraction of the undetected mutant alleles could be either genomic rearrangements or mutations occurring in noncoding regions of the ABCC6 gene. The distribution pattern of ABCC6 mutations revealed a cluster of disease-causing variants within exons encoding a large C-terminal cytoplasmic loop and in the C-terminal nucleotide-binding domain (NBD2). We discuss the potential structural and functional significance of this mutation pattern within the context of the complex relationship between the PXE phenotype and the function of ABCC6.
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85 PXE Mutations The most-prevalent mutations detected in the ABCC6 gene were missense substitutions (21 [58.3%] mutations, Table 1 ABCC6 Mutations in a Cohort of Patients with PXE CHANGE IN STATUS a ORIGIN(S)b EXON(S)c REFERENCE(S)Amino Acid Nucleotide … 179-195del ht Belgium 2 Present study … 938-939insT ch, ht SA, UK 8 Present study N411K 1233TrG ht US 10 Present study A455P 1363GrC Nd Nd 11 Uitto et al. (2001) R518Q 1553GrA ch, ht Belgium 12 Present study, Uitto et al. (2001) F568S 1703TrC ch US 13 Present study … ABCC6del15 hm SA 15 Present study … 1944del22 ht Holland 16 Bergen et al. (2000) … 1995delG ht Germany 16 Present study L673P 2018TrC ch SA 16 Present study R765Q 2294GrA ht Germany 18 Present study Y768X 2304CrA ch, ht SA 18 Present study … 2322delC ht US 18 Present study … 2542delG Nd Nd 19 Uitto et al. (2001) … IVS21ϩ1GrT ch US, Germany i-21 Present study, Uitto et al. (2001) R1030X 3088CrT ht SA, UK 23 Present study R1114P 3341GrC hm UK 24 Present study S1121W 3362CrG ch Germany 24 Present study R1138W 3412CrT hm Nd 24 Ringpfeil et al. (2000) R1138P 3413GrC ch Germany 24 Present study R1138Q 3413GrA ch UK, US 24 Present study, Ringpfeil et al. (2000) R1141X 3421CrT All All 24 Present study and othersd R1164X 3490CrT ch Germany, UK 24 Ringpfeil et al. (2001) G1203D 3608GrA ch Germany 25 Present study … IVS26-1GrA ch Belgium i-26 Present study, Ringpfeil et al. (2000, 2001) Q1237X 3709CrT ch Belgium 26 Present study … 3775delT ht, hm SA, US, Holland 27 Present study, Bergen et al. (2000) V1298F 3892GrT ht US 28 Present study T1301I 3902CrT ch Belgium 28 Present study G1302R 3904GrA hm US 28 Present study A1303P 3907GrC ch Belgium 28 Present study R1314W 3940CrT hm US 28 Present study R1314Q 3941GrA ch Germany 28 Present study G1321S 3961GrA ht US 28 Present study R1339C 4015CrT All SA, US 28 Present study, Struk et al. (2000) Q1347H 4041GrC hm US 28 Present study D1361N 4081GrA ch Germany 29 Present study … 4104delC ch Belgium 29 Present study R1398X 4192CrT ch Belgium 29 Present study … ABCC6del23-29 ch US 23-29 Present study, Ringpfeil et al. (2001) … 4220insAGAA ht Holland 30 Bergen et al. (2000) I1424T 4271TrC ht US 30 Present study … ABCC6del ht Holland all Bergen et al. (2000) a Nd p not determined; hm p homozygote; ht p heterozygote; ch p compound heterozygote.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 11536079:85:1604
status: NEW94 Although most of the mutations reported here appear to be unique, a few disease-causing variants have been found to occur frequently in apparently unrelated individuals; R1141X was found at Table 2 Frequencies of Mutant Alleles Found in a Cohort of 101 Unrelated Patients with PXE MUTATION a OVERALL EUROPE UNITED STATES No. of Alleles Frequency (%) No. of Alleles Frequency (%) No. of Alleles Frequency (%) R1141X 38 18.8 33 28.4 3 4.1 ABCC6del23-29 26 12.9 5 4.3 21 28.4 IVS21ϩ1GrT 7 3.5 4 3.4 3 4.1 G1302R 4 2.0 0 .0 4 5.4 A1303P 4 2.0 3 2.6 1 1.4 R1314W 3 1.5 0 .0 3 4.1 R518Q* 3 1.5 1 .9 1 1.4 3775delT* 3 1.5 2 1.7 0 .0 R1138Q 2 1.0 1 .9 1 1.4 V1298F 2 1.0 0 .0 2 2.7 R1339C 2 1.0 0 .0 2 2.7 Q1347H 2 1.0 0 .0 2 2.7 4104delC* 2 1.0 1 .9 0 .0 179-195del 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 938-939insT* 1 .5 0 .0 0 .0 N411K 1 .5 0 .0 1 1.4 F568S 1 .5 0 .0 1 1.4 1995delG 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 R765Q 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 2322delC 1 .5 0 .0 1 1.4 R1030X* 1 .5 0 .0 0 .0 R1114P 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 S1121W 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 R1138P 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 G1203D 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 IVS26-1GrA 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 Q1237X 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 W1241C 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 T1301I 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 R1314Q 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 D1361N 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 R1398X 1 .5 1 .9 0 .0 G1321S 1 .5 0 .0 1 1.4 I1424T 1 .5 0 .0 1 1.4 ?
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 11536079:94:659
status: NEW[hide] Loss of ATP-dependent transport activity in pseudo... J Biol Chem. 2002 May 10;277(19):16860-7. Epub 2002 Mar 5. Ilias A, Urban Z, Seidl TL, Le Saux O, Sinko E, Boyd CD, Sarkadi B, Varadi A
Loss of ATP-dependent transport activity in pseudoxanthoma elasticum-associated mutants of human ABCC6 (MRP6).
J Biol Chem. 2002 May 10;277(19):16860-7. Epub 2002 Mar 5., 2002-05-10 [PMID:11880368]
Abstract [show]
Mutations in the ABCC6 (MRP6) gene cause pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE), a rare heritable disorder resulting in the calcification of elastic fibers. In the present study a cDNA encoding a full-length normal variant of ABCC6 was amplified from a human kidney cDNA library, and the protein was expressed in Sf9 insect cells. In isolated membranes ATP binding as well as ATP-dependent active transport by ABCC6 was demonstrated. We found that glutathione conjugates, including leukotriene C(4) and N-ethylmaleimide S-glutathione (NEM-GS), were actively transported by human ABCC6. Organic anions (probenecid, benzbromarone, indomethacin), known to interfere with glutathione conjugate transport of human ABCC1 and ABCC2, inhibited the ABCC6-mediated NEM-GS transport in a specific manner, indicating that ABCC6 has a unique substrate specificity. We have also expressed three missense mutant forms of ABCC6, which have recently been shown to cause PXE. MgATP binding was normal in these proteins; ATP-dependent NEM-GS or leukotriene C(4) transport, however, was abolished. Our data indicate that human ABCC6 is a primary active transporter for organic anions. In the three ABCC6 mutant forms examined, the loss of transport activity suggests that these mutations result in a PXE phenotype through a direct influence on the transport activity of this ABC transporter.
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No. Sentence Comment
47 To study the effect of PXE mutations on MRP6/ABCC6 function, we have inserted three naturally occurring PXE mutations, V1298F, G1302R, and G1321S (20), into our cDNA by using inverse PCR mutagenesis (21).
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 11880368:47:119
status: NEW50 The V1298F were present on 2 alleles of the 101 unrelated patients with PXE, whereas the G1321S was present on 1 allele (20).
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 11880368:50:4
status: NEW77 Using this cDNA with a verified sequence, we have generated recombinant baculoviruses containing the wild type human ABCC6 cDNA as well as that of three ABCC6 mutant variants (V1298F, G1302R, and G1321S).
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 11880368:77:176
status: NEW84 Moreover, as shown by immunostaining in Fig. 1B, all three mutant forms of human ABCC6 (V1298F, G1302R, and G1321S) were expressed in about the same amount as the wild type protein (94, 78, and 88% of the wild type, respectively, as measured by densitometry) and all with the correct molecular mass.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 11880368:84:88
status: NEW157 Transport Studies of Mutants ABCC6 Variants Causing PXE-Based on these results and to analyze the transport activity of the PXE-causing ABCC6 mutations, we studied the NEM-GS and the LTC4 uptake in Sf9 cell membrane vesicles containing three ABCC6 variants, V1298F, G1302R, and G1321S.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 11880368:157:258
status: NEW163 Isolated membranes of Sf9 cells expressing wild type or mutant (V1298F, G1302R, and G1321S) ABCC6 transporters were incubated in the presence of 2 M Mg-8-N3-[␥-32 P]ATP and either orthovanadate (1 mM) or AlF4 (2 mM) was added as a trapping anion.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 11880368:163:64
status: NEW173 Effect of V1298F, G1302R, and G1321S mutations on the transport and nucleotide-trapping activity of human ABCC6.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 11880368:173:10
status: NEW181 Two of the transport-negative PXE mutants (V1298F and G1321S) could not be labeled under these nucleotide-trapping conditions (Fig. 4C) if either vanadate or AlF4 was present as a complex-stabilizing anion.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 11880368:181:43
status: NEW223 In the present study we expressed and investigated three PXE mutants, V1298F, G1302R, and G1321S, that were all within the C-proximal ABC domain (see Fig. 1A).
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 11880368:223:70
status: NEW236 In the present study we found that neither V1298F nor G1321S ABCC6 could be labeled with 8-azido-[␥-32 P]ATP in the presence of vanadate or AlF4 under nucleotide-trapping conditions (see Fig. 4C).
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 11880368:236:43
status: NEW[hide] ABCC6/MRP6 mutations: further insight into the mol... Eur J Hum Genet. 2003 Mar;11(3):215-24. Hu X, Plomp A, Wijnholds J, Ten Brink J, van Soest S, van den Born LI, Leys A, Peek R, de Jong PT, Bergen AA
ABCC6/MRP6 mutations: further insight into the molecular pathology of pseudoxanthoma elasticum.
Eur J Hum Genet. 2003 Mar;11(3):215-24., [PMID:12673275]
Abstract [show]
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) is a hereditary disease characterized by progressive dystrophic mineralization of the elastic fibres. PXE patients frequently present with skin lesions and visual acuity loss. Recently, we and others showed that PXE is caused by mutations in the ABCC6/MRP6 gene. However, the molecular pathology of PXE is complicated by yet unknown factors causing the variable clinical expression of the disease. In addition, the presence of ABCC6/MRP6 pseudogenes and multiple ABCC6/MRP6-associated deletions complicate interpretation of molecular genetic studies. In this study, we present the mutation spectrum of ABCC6/MRP6 in 59 PXE patients from the Netherlands. We detected 17 different mutations in 65 alleles. The majority of mutations occurred in the NBF1 (nucleotide binding fold) domain, in the eighth cytoplasmatic loop between the 15th and 16th transmembrane regions, and in NBF2 of the predicted ABCC6/MRP6 protein. The R1141X mutation was by far the most common mutation identified in 19 (32.2%) patients. The second most frequent mutation, an intragenic deletion from exon 23 to exon 29 in ABCC6/MRP6, was detected in 11 (18.6%) of the patients. Our data include 11 novel ABCC6/MRP6 mutations, as well as additional segregation data relevant to the molecular pathology of PXE in a limited number of patients and families. The consequences of our data for the molecular pathology of PXE are discussed.
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38 Table 2 Summary of ABCC6/MRP6 mutations associated with PXE known today: our data combined with those of the literature Mutation Protein alteration Nucleotide substitution Location Reference Nonsense Q378X 1132C > T Exon 9 19,20 R518X 1552C > T Exon 2 41 Q749X 2247C > T Exon 17 This study Y768X 2304C > A Exon 18 22 R1030X 3088C > T Exon 23 22 R1141X 3421C > T Exon 24 12,20,22,38,39, this study R1164X 3490C > T Exon 24 12,41 Q1237X 3709C > T Exon 26 22 R1398X 4192C >T Exon 29 22 T364R Missense N411K 1091C > G Exon 9 20 A455P 1233T > G Exon 10 22 R518Q 1363G > C Exon 11 38 F568S 1553G > A Exon 12 22,38 L673P 1703T > C Exon 13 22 R765Q 2018T > C Exon 16 22 R1114P 2294G > A Exon 18 22, this study R1114H 3341G > C Exon 24 22 S1121W 3341G > A Exon 24 This study T1130M 3362C > G Exon 24 22 R1138W 3390C > T Exon 24 This study R1138Q 3412C > T Exon 24 12 R1138P 3413G > A Exon 24 12,22 G1203D 3413G > C Exon 24 22 R1221C 3608G > A Exon 25 22 V1298F 3663C > T Exon 26 This study T1301I 3892G > T Exon 28 22 G1302R 3902C > T Exon 28 22 A1303P 3904G > A Exon 28 22, this study R1314W 3907G > C Exon 28 22, this study R1314Q 3940C > T Exon 28 22 G1321S 3941G > A Exon 28 22 R1339C 3961G > A Exon 28 22 Q1347H 4015C > T Exon 28 22,39 G1354R 4041G > C Exon 28 22 D1361N 4060G > C Exon 29 20,38 K1394N 4081G > A Exon 29 22 I1424T 4182G > T Exon 29 This study R1459C 4271T > C Exon 30 22 4377C > T Exon 30 This study Frameshift IVS17-12delT T Intron 17 This study IVS21+1G>T Intron 21 22,38 IVS26-1G>A Intron 26 12,21,22 179del 9 Exon 2 20 179-195del Exon 2 22 960del C Exon 8 41 1944del22 Exon 16 This study 1995delG Exon 16 22 2322delC Exon 18 22 2542delG Exon 19 41 3775delT Exon 27 This study 4104delC Exon 29 22 4182delG Exon 29 This study 938-939insT Exon 8 22 4220insAGAA Exon 30 This study Large deletion Exons 23-29 21, This study Exon 15 22 ABCC1, ABCC6 41, this study Mutation types The mutation types found in this study are summarized in Table 1.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 12673275:38:945
status: NEW[hide] Pseudoxanthoma elasticum: a clinical, histopatholo... Surv Ophthalmol. 2003 Jul-Aug;48(4):424-38. Hu X, Plomp AS, van Soest S, Wijnholds J, de Jong PT, Bergen AA
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum: a clinical, histopathological, and molecular update.
Surv Ophthalmol. 2003 Jul-Aug;48(4):424-38., [PMID:12850230]
Abstract [show]
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum is an autosomally inherited disorder that is associated with the accumulation of mineralized and fragmented elastic fibers in the skin, Bruch's membrane in the retina, and vessel walls. The ophthalmic and dermatologic expression of pseudoxanthoma elasticum and its vascular complications are heterogeneous, with considerable variation in phenotype, progression, and mode of inheritance. Using linkage analysis and mutation detection techniques, mutations in the ABCC6 gene were recently implicated in the etiology of pseudoxanthoma elasticum. ABCC6 encodes the sixth member of the ATP-binding cassette transporter and multidrug resistance protein family (MRP6). In humans, this transmembrane protein is highly expressed in the liver and kidney. Lower expression was found in tissues affected by pseudoxanthoma elasticum, including skin, retina, and vessel walls. So far, the substrates transported by the ABCC6 protein and its physiological role in the etiology of pseudoxanthoma elasticum are not known. A functional transport study of rat MRP6 suggests that small peptides such as the endothelin receptor antagonist BQ123 are transported by MRP6. Similar molecules transported by ABCC6 in humans may be essential for extracellular matrix deposition or turnover of connective tissue at specific sites in the body. One of these sites is Bruch's membrane. This review is an update on etiology of pseudoxanthoma elasticum, including its clinical and genetic features, pathogenesis, and biomolecular basis.
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No. Sentence Comment
193 TABLE 3 Summary of ABCC6 Mutations in PXE Patients Mutation Protein Alteration Nucleotide Substitution Location Reference Nonsense Q378X 1132C Ͼ T Exon 9 16,107 R518X 1552C Ͼ T Exon 12 88 Y768X 2304C Ͼ A Exon 18 67 R1030X 3088C Ͼ T Exon 23 67 R1141X 3421C Ͼ T Exon 24 12,45,67,107,111,112,133 R1164X 3490C Ͼ T Exon 24 88,112 Q1237X 3709C Ͼ T Exon 26 67 R1398X 4192C Ͼ T Exon 29 67 Missense T364R 1091C Ͼ G Exon 9 107 N411K 1233T Ͼ G Exon 10 67 A455P 1363G Ͼ C Exon 11 142 R518Q 1553G Ͼ A Exon 12 67,142 F568S 1703T Ͼ C Exon 13 67 L673P 2018T Ͼ C Exon 16 67 R765Q 2294G Ͼ A Exon 18 67 R1114P 3341G Ͼ C Exon 24 67 S1121W 3362C Ͼ G Exon 24 67 R1138W 3412C Ͼ T Exon 24 111 R1138Q 3413G Ͼ A Exon 24 67,111 R1138P 3413G Ͼ C Exon 24 67 G1203D 3608G Ͼ A Exon 25 67 V1298F 3892G Ͼ T Exon 28 67 T13011 3902C Ͼ T Exon 28 67 G1302R 3904G Ͼ A Exon 28 67 A1303P 3907G Ͼ C Exon 28 67 R1314W 3940C Ͼ T Exon 28 67 R1314Q 3941G Ͼ A Exon 28 67 G1321S 3961G Ͼ A Exon 28 67 R1339C 4015C Ͼ T Exon 28 67,133 Q1347H 4041G Ͼ C Exon 28 67 G1354R 4060G Ͼ C Exon 29 107,142 D1361N 4081G Ͼ A Exon 29 67 11424T 4271T Ͼ C Exon 30 67 Frameshift Splicing IVS21 ϩ 1G ϾT Intron 21 67,142 IVS26-1G ϾA Intron 26 67,111,112 Deletion 179del9 Exon 2 107 179-195del Exon 2 67 960delC Exon 8 88 1944del22 Exon 16 12 1995delG Exon 16 67 2322delC Exon 18 67 2542delG Exon 19 67 3775delT Exon 27 12,67 4101delC Exon 29 67 Insertion 938-939insT Exon 8 67 4220insAGAA Exon 30 12 Intragenic deletion Exon 23-29 67,112 Exon 15 67 Intergenic deletion ABCC6 12,88 LOCAL RETINAL TRANSPORT FUNCTION OF ABCC6 ABCC6 Expression in the Retina Bergen et al detected ABCC6 expression in various tissues in man.12 Low expression levels of ABCC6 were observed in the retina as well as other tissues usually affected by PXE, including skin and vessel wall.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 12850230:193:883
status: NEW[hide] Identification of two novel missense mutations (p.... Intern Med. 2004 Dec;43(12):1171-6. Noji Y, Inazu A, Higashikata T, Nohara A, Kawashiri MA, Yu W, Todo Y, Nozue T, Uno Y, Hifumi S, Mabuchi H
Identification of two novel missense mutations (p.R1221C and p.R1357W) in the ABCC6 (MRP6) gene in a Japanese patient with pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE).
Intern Med. 2004 Dec;43(12):1171-6., [PMID:15645653]
Abstract [show]
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) is a rare, inherited, systemic disease of elastic tissue that in particular affects the skin, eyes, and cardiovascular system. Recently, the ABCC6 (MRP6) gene was found to cause PXE. A defective type of ABCC6 gene (16pl3.1) was determined in two Japanese patients with PXE. In order to determine whether these patients have a defect in ABCC6 gene, we examined each of 31 exons and flanking intron sequences by PCR methods (SSCP screening and direct sequencing). We found two novel missense variants in exon 26 and 29 in a compound heterozygous state in the first patient. One is a missense mutation (c.3661C>T; p.R1221C) in exon 26 and the other is a missense mutation (c.4069C>T; p.R1357W) in exon 29. These mutations have not been detected in our control panel of 200 alleles. To our knowledge, this is the first report of mutation identification in the ABCC6 gene in Japanese PXE patients. The second patient was homozygous for 2542_2543delG in ABCC6 gene and heterozygous for 6 kb deletion of LDL-R gene. This case is the first report of a genetically confirmed case of double mutations both in PXE and FH loci.
Comments [show]
This is erroneously identified as a reported sequence variant. In the cited article E18F is the name of a PCR primer.
aranyi on 2012-05-05 13:19:37
aranyi on 2012-05-05 13:19:37
No. Sentence Comment
74 In vitro transport studies with three PXE-causing mutants (p.V1298F, p.G1302R and p.G1321S) within NBD2, that had been expressed in Sf9 cells, showed markedly reduced transport activities (12).
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 15645653:74:61
status: NEW[hide] Pseudoxanthoma elasticum: a clinical, pathophysiol... J Med Genet. 2005 Dec;42(12):881-92. Epub 2005 May 13. Chassaing N, Martin L, Calvas P, Le Bert M, Hovnanian A
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum: a clinical, pathophysiological and genetic update including 11 novel ABCC6 mutations.
J Med Genet. 2005 Dec;42(12):881-92. Epub 2005 May 13., [PMID:15894595]
Abstract [show]
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) is an inherited systemic disease of connective tissue primarily affecting the skin, retina, and cardiovascular system. It is characterised pathologically by elastic fibre mineralisation and fragmentation (so called "elastorrhexia"), and clinically by high heterogeneity in age of onset and the extent and severity of organ system involvement. PXE was recently associated with mutations in the ABCC6 (ATP binding cassette subtype C number 6) gene. At least one ABCC6 mutation is found in about 80% of patients. These mutations are identifiable in most of the 31 ABCC6 exons and consist of missense, nonsense, frameshift mutations, or large deletions. No correlation between the nature or location of the mutations and phenotype severity has yet been established. Recent findings support exclusive recessive inheritance. The proposed prevalence of PXE is 1/25,000, but this is probably an underestimate. ABCC6 encodes the protein ABCC6 (also known as MRP6), a member of the large ATP dependent transmembrane transporter family that is expressed predominantly in the liver and kidneys, and only to a lesser extent in tissues affected by PXE. The physiological substrates of ABCC6 remain to be determined, but the current hypothesis is that PXE should be considered to be a metabolic disease with undetermined circulating molecules interacting with the synthesis, turnover, or maintenance of elastic fibres.
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No. Sentence Comment
378 Interestingly, among the 49 different missense mutations in ABCC6 (42 previously published and seven new ones in the present study), the majority (43) replace critical amino acids in intracellular domains (seven and 19 mutations are located in I1424T R1459C 4220insAGAA 4318delA G1354R D1361N K1394N E1400K R1298X 410delC 418delG 3775delT R1275X R1221C D1238H W1223X Q1237X IVS26-1G→A R1114C R1114H R1114P S1121W M1127T T1130M R1138P R1138Q R1138W R1141X R1164X R765Q A766D Y768X A781V 2322delC IVS19-2delAG T364R R391G Q378X Q363_R373del 938_939insT 960delC IVS8+2delTG G199X Y227X 179_195del 179_187del G226R V74del Q749X IVS17-12delTT IVS14-5T→G IVS13-29T→A R600G V1298F G1299S T1301I G1302R A1303P S1307P R1314Q R1314W G1321S L1335P R1339C P1346S Q1347H R1030X F1048del R807Q V810M A820P 254delG L673P 1944_1966del 1995delG R518Q R518X K502M A455P G992R IVS21+1G→T G1203DF568SN411K C440G IVS25-3C→A 3544dupC Ex23_29del 30 Ex15del ABCC6del 252015105 Figure 10 Position of the mutations in the ABCC6 gene.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 15894595:378:688
status: NEW379 Table 2 ABCC6 mutations Nucleotide variation Protein alteration Location (gene ) Location (protein) Reference Missense 676 GRA G226R Exon 7 CL 3 This study 1091 CRG T364R Exon 9 TS 7 63, 78 1171 ARG R391G Exon 9 CL 4 88 1233 TRG N411K Exon 10 CL 4 63, 90 1318 TRG C440G Exon 10 TS 8 63 1363 GRC A455P Exon 11 TS 9 86 1505 ART K502M Exon 12 CL 5 This study 1553 GRA R518Q Exon 12 CL 5 63, 86, 88, 90 1703 TRC F568S Exon 13 ECL 5 90 1798 CRT R600G Exon 14 CL 6 63 2018 TRC L673P Exon 16 NBF 1 90 2294 GRA R765Q Exon 18 NBF 1 87, 90 2297 CRA A766D Exon 18 NBF 1 88 2342 CRT A781V Exon 18 NBF 1 This study 2420 GRA R807Q Exon 19 NBF 1 This study 2428 GRA V810M Exon 19 NBF1 63 2458 GRC A820P Exon 19 NBF1 63 2965 GRC G992R Exon 22 ECL 6 This study 3340 CRT R1114C Exon 24 CL 8 63 3341 GRA R1114H Exon 24 CL 8 87 3341 GRC R1114P Exon 24 CL 8 90 3362 CRG S1121W Exon 24 CL 8 90 3380 CRT M1127T Exon 24 CL 8 63 3389 CRT T1130M Exon 24 CL 8 63, 87, 88 3412 CRT R1138W Exon 24 CL 8 17 3413 GRC R1138P Exon 24 CL 8 90 3413 GRA R1138Q Exon 24 CL 8 17, 63, 88, 90 3608 GRA G1203D Exon 25 TS17 90 3663 CRT R1221C Exon 26 COOH 87 3712 GRC D1238H Exon 26 COOH 88 3892 GRT V1298F Exon 28 NBF 2 90 3895 GRA G1299S Exon 28 NBF 2 This study 3902 CRT T1301I Exon 28 NBF 2 90 3904 GRA G1302R Exon 28 NBF 2 87, 90 3907 GRC A1303P Exon 28 NBF 2 87, 90 3919 TRC S1307P Exon 28 NBF 2 This study 3940 CRT R1314W Exon 28 NBF 2 90 3941 GRA R1314Q Exon 28 NBF 2 90 3961 GRA G1321S Exon 28 NBF 2 90 4004 TRC L1335P Exon 28 NBF 2 88 4015 CRT R1339C Exon 28 NBF 2 18, 63, 90 4036 CRT P1346S Exon 28 NBF 2 63 4041 GRC Q1347H Exon 28 NBF 2 90 4060 GRC G1354R Exon 29 NBF 2 78, 86 4081 GRA D1361N Exon 29 NBF 2 90 4182 GRT K1394N Exon 29 NBF 2 87 4198 GRA E1400K Exon 29 NBF 2 63, 88 4271 TRC I1424T Exon 30 NBF 2 90 4377 CRT R1459C Exon 30 NBF 2 87 Nonsense 595 CRT G199X Exon 5 89 681 CRG Y227X Exon 7 84 1132 CRT Q378X Exon 9 63, 78, 83 1552 CRT R518X Exon 12 63, 84, 88 2245 CRT Q749X Exon 17 87 2304 CRA Y768X Exon 18 90 3088 CRT R1030X Exon 23 63, 90 3421 CRT R1141X Exon 24 15, 17, 18, 63, 78, 85, 87, 88, 90 3490 CRT R1164X Exon 24 84, 85, 88 3668 GRA W1223X Exon 26 88 3709 CRT Q1237X Exon 26 90 3823 CRT R1275X Exon 27 63 4192 CRT R1398X Exon 29 90 Splicing alteration IVS8+2delTG Intron 8 This study IVS13-29 TRA Intron 13 This study IVS14-5 TRG Intron 14 This study IVS17-12delTT Intron 17 87 IVS18-2delAG Intron 17 63 IVS21+1 GRT Intron 21 86, 90 IVS25-3 CRA Intron 25 88 IVS26-1 GRA Intron 26 17, 63, 90 Insertion 938_939insT Frameshift Exon 8 90 3544dupC Frameshift Exon 25 63 4220insAGAA Frameshift Exon 30 15, 87 Small deletion 179_187del Frameshift Exon 2 78 179_195del Frameshift Exon 2 90 Pseudoxanthoma elasticum www.jmedgenet.com NBF1 and NBF2, respectively), four are located in transmembrane domains, and only two mutations have been identified in extracellular domains.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 15894595:379:1157
status: NEW[hide] Mutation detection in the ABCC6 gene and genotype-... J Med Genet. 2007 Oct;44(10):621-8. Epub 2007 Jul 6. Pfendner EG, Vanakker OM, Terry SF, Vourthis S, McAndrew PE, McClain MR, Fratta S, Marais AS, Hariri S, Coucke PJ, Ramsay M, Viljoen D, Terry PF, De Paepe A, Uitto J, Bercovitch LG
Mutation detection in the ABCC6 gene and genotype-phenotype analysis in a large international case series affected by pseudoxanthoma elasticum.
J Med Genet. 2007 Oct;44(10):621-8. Epub 2007 Jul 6., [PMID:17617515]
Abstract [show]
BACKGROUND: Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE), an autosomal recessive disorder with considerable phenotypic variability, mainly affects the eyes, skin and cardiovascular system, characterised by dystrophic mineralization of connective tissues. It is caused by mutations in the ABCC6 (ATP binding cassette family C member 6) gene, which encodes MRP6 (multidrug resistance-associated protein 6). OBJECTIVE: To investigate the mutation spectrum of ABCC6 and possible genotype-phenotype correlations. METHODS: Mutation data were collected on an international case series of 270 patients with PXE (239 probands, 31 affected family members). A denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography-based assay was developed to screen for mutations in all 31 exons, eliminating pseudogene coamplification. In 134 patients with a known phenotype and both mutations identified, genotype-phenotype correlations were assessed. RESULTS: In total, 316 mutant alleles in ABCC6, including 39 novel mutations, were identified in 239 probands. Mutations were found to cluster in exons 24 and 28, corresponding to the second nucleotide-binding fold and the last intracellular domain of the protein. Together with the recurrent R1141X and del23-29 mutations, these mutations accounted for 71.5% of the total individual mutations identified. Genotype-phenotype analysis failed to reveal a significant correlation between the types of mutations identified or their predicted effect on the expression of the protein and the age of onset and severity of the disease. CONCLUSIONS: This study emphasises the principal role of ABCC6 mutations in the pathogenesis of PXE, but the reasons for phenotypic variability remain to be explored.
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No. Sentence Comment
296 Molecular studies of three different MRP6 missense mutations (V1298F, G1302R and G1321S) performed in vitro found that none of these three mutations resulted in ATP-dependent substrate transport although ATP binding was normal.11 Although these in vitro data do not address whether the proteins bearing these missense mutations are actually formed in the cell and inserted properly into the membrane, it confirms the hypothesis that a missense mutation in a critical portion of the molecule can completely ablate the function of the protein and result in a phenotype as severe as if no protein was present at all.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 17617515:296:62
status: NEW262 Genotype-phenotype correlations The comparison of subjects whose mutations would probably have resulted in no functional protein with those whose mutations would probably have resulted in some functional Table 2 Distinct mutations identified in the international case series of 271 patients with PXE Nucleotide change*À Predicted consequenceÀ Frequency (alleles) Exon-intron location Domain affected` Mutant alleles (%) References1 c.105delA p.S37fsX80 2 2 0.6 28 c.177-185del9 p.R60_Y62del 1 2 0.3 9, 28 c.179del12ins3 p. R60_W64del L60_R61ins 1 2 0.3 c.220-1gRc SJ 1 IVS 2 0.3 c.724gRt p.E242X 1 7 0.3 c.938insT FS 1 8 0.3 25 c.998+2delT SJ 1 IVS 8 0.3 2, 21 c.998+2del2 SJ 1 IVS 8 0.3 18 c.951cRg p.S317R 2 9 TM6 0.6 28 c.1087cRt p.Q363X 1 9 0.3 c.1091gRa p.T364R 1 9 TM7 0.3 9, 19, 21, 28 c.1132cRt p.Q378X 4 9 1.2 9, 17-19, 28, 37 c.1144cRt p.R382W 2 9 IC4 0.6 c.1171aRg p.R391G 3 9 IC4 0.9 9, 18, 28, 37 c.1176gRc p.K392N 1 9 IC4 0.3 c.1388tRa p.L463H 1 11 TM9 0.3 c.1484tRa p.L495H 1 12 IC5 0.3 28 c.1552cRt p.R518X 2 12 0.6 18, 19, 27, 28, 37 c.1553gRa p.R518Q 4 12 IC5 1.2 18, 19, 24, 28, 31 c.1603tRc p.S535P 1 12 TM10 0.3 c.1703tRc p.F568S 1 13 TM11 0.3 24 c.1798cRt p.R600C 1 14 TM11 0.3 c.1857insC FS 1 14 0.3 c.1987gRt p.G663C 1 16 NBF1 0.3 c.1999delG FS 1 16 0.3 c.2070+5GRA SJ 2 IVS 16 0.6 c.2093aRc p.Q698P 2 17 NBF1 0.6 c.2097gRt p.E699D 1 17 NBF1 0.3 c.2177tRc p.L726P 1 17 NBF1 0.3 c.2237ins10 FS 2 17 0.6 c.2252tRa p.M751K 1 18 NBF1 0.3 20, 37 c.2263gRa p.G755R 2 18 NBF1 0.6 c.2278cRt p.R760W 3 18 NBF1 0.9 20, 28, 32, 37 c.2294gRa p.R765Q 2 18 NBF1 0.6 20-22, 25, 28, 32, 37 c.2329gRa p.D777N 1 18 NBF1 0.3 c.2359gRt p.V787I 1 18 NBF1 0.3 c.2432cRt p.T811M 1 19 IC6 0.3 6 c.2643gRt p.R881S 1 20 IC6 0.3 c.2787+1GRT SJ 9 IVS 21 2.8 17, 20, 24, 28, 31, 37 c.2814cRg p.Y938X 1 22 0.3 c.2820insC FS 1 22 0.3 c.2831cRt p.T944I 1 22 TM12 0.3 c.2848gRa p.A950T 1 22 TM12 0.3 c.2974gRc p.G992R 1 22 TM13 0.3 2, 42 c.3340cRt p.R1114C 2 24 IC8 0.6 19, 28, 32, 37, 41 c.3389cRt p.T1130M 3 24 IC8 0.9 18, 19, 21, 22, 28, 30, 32, 37, 41 c.3398gRc p.G1133A 1 24 IC8 0.3 c.3412gRa p.R1138W 7 24 IC8 2.2 28, 30, 37 c.3413cRt p.R1138Q 7 24 IC8 2.2 18, 19, 24, 25, 28, 30, 32, 37, 41 c.3415gRa p.A1139T 2 24 IC8 0.6 c.3415gRa & c.2070+5GRA* p.A1139T & SJ 1 24, IVS 16 IC8 0.3 c.3415gRa & c.4335delG* p.A1139T & FS 1 24, 30 IC8 0.3 c.3421cRt p.R1141X 92 24 29.3 5, 9, 15,18, 19, 21, 22, 24, 28, 30-32, 33, 37, 41 c.3427cRt p.Q1143X 1 24 0.3 c.3490cRt p.R1164X 15 24 4.7 18, 27, 28, 31, 33 c.3491gRa p.R1164Q 1 24 IC8 0.3 28 c.3661cRt p.R1221C 1 26 IC9 0.3 21, 22, 28, 29 c.3662gRa p.R1221H 2 26 IC9 0.6 40 c.3676cRa p.L1226I 1 26 IC9 0.3 c.3722gRa p.W1241X 2 26 0.6 c.3774insC FS 2 27 0.6 c.3775delT p.G1259fsX1272 3 27 0.9 15, 25, 28, 41 c.3880-3882del p.K1294del 1 27 0.3 c.3883-5GRA SJ 1 IVS 27 0.3 c.3892gRt p.V1298F 1 28 NBF2 0.3 25 c.3904gRa p.G1302R 7 28 NBF2 2.2 21, 22, 25, 28 c.3907gRc p.A1303P 1 28 NBF2 0.3 21, 22, 25, 28 c.3912delG FS 1 28 0.3 28 c.3940cRt p.R1314W 4 28 NBF2 1.2 24, 25, 32, 36 c.3941gRa p.R1314Q 1 28 NBF2 0.3 25, 28, 32, 36, 41 c.4004tRa p.L1335Q 1 28 NBF2 0.3 c.4015cRt p.R1339C 16 28 NBF2 5.0 19, 25, 28, 33 c.4016gRa p.R1339H 2 28 NBF2 0.6 c.4025tRc p.I1342T 1 28 NBF2 0.3 protein did not yield significant differences.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 17617515:262:2829
status: NEW[hide] [Pseudoxanthoma elasticum]. Ophthalmologe. 2006 Jun;103(6):537-51; quiz 552-3. Ladewig MS, Gotting C, Szliska C, Issa PC, Helb HM, Bedenicki I, Scholl HP, Holz FG
[Pseudoxanthoma elasticum].
Ophthalmologe. 2006 Jun;103(6):537-51; quiz 552-3., [PMID:16763870]
Abstract [show]
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) is an inherited disorder that is associated with accumulation of mineralized and fragmented elastic fibers in the skin, vessel walls, and Bruch's membrane. Clinically, patients exhibit characteristic lesions of the skin (soft, ivory-colored papules in a reticular pattern that predominantly affect the neck), the posterior segment of the eye (peau d'orange, angioid streaks, choroidal neovascularizations), and the cardiovascular system (peripheral arterial occlusive disease, coronary occlusion, gastrointestinal bleeding). There is no causal therapy. Recent studies suggest that PXE is inherited almost exclusively as an autosomal recessive trait. Its prevalence has been estimated to be 1:25,000-100,000. The ABCC6 gene on chromosome 16p13.1 is associated with the disease. Mutations within the ABCC6 gene cause reduced or absent transmembraneous transport that leads to accumulation of substrate and calcification of elastic fibers. Although based on clinical features the diagnosis appears readily possible, variability in phenotypic expressions and the low prevalence may be responsible that the disease is underdiagnosed. This review covers current knowledge of PXE and presents therapeutic approaches.
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272 Internetadressen PXE-Selbsthilfegruppe Deutschland : http://www.pxe-groenblad.de PXE International: http://www.pxe.org Tabelle 5 PXE verursachende Mutationen imabcc6-Gen Klassifikation Lokalisation Gen Protein Missense Exon 9 Exon 9 Exon 10 Exon 10 Exon 11 Exon 12 Exon 13 Exon 14 Exon 16 Exon 18 Exon 18 Exon 18 Exon 18 Exon 19 Exon 19 Exon 19 Exon 22 Exon 24 Exon 24 Exon 24 Exon 24 Exon 24 Exon 24 Exon 24 Exon 24 Exon 24 Exon 25 Exon 26 Exon 26 Exon 26 Exon 28 Exon 28 Exon 28 Exon 28 Exon 28 Exon 28 Exon 28 Exon 28 Exon 28 Exon 28 Exon 28 Exon 28 Exon 28 Exon 29 Exon 29 Exon 29 Exon 29 Exon 29 Exon 30 Exon 30 Exon 30 c.1091CaG c.1171AaG c.1233TaG c.1318TaG c.1363GaC c.1553GaA c.1703TaC c.1798CaT c.2018TaC c.2252TaA c.2278CaT c.2294GaA c.2297CaA c.2428GaA c.2458GaC c.2552TaC c.2855TaG c.3340CaT c.3341GaA c.3341GaC c.3362CaG c.3380CaT c.3389CaT c.3412CaT c.3413GaA c.3413GaC c.3608GaA c.3661CaT c.3712GaC c.3715TaC c.3892GaT c.3902CaT c.3904GaA c.3907GaC c.3932GaA c.3940CaT c.3941GaA c.3961GaA c.3976GaA c.4004TaC c.4015CaT c.4036CaT c.4041GaC c.4060GaC c.4069CaT c.4081GaA c.4182GaT c.4198GaA c.4209CaA c.4271TaC c.4377CaT p.T364R p.R391G p.N411K p.C440G p.A455P p.R518Q p.F568S p.R600G p.L673P p.M751K p.R760W p.R765Q p.A766D p.V810M p.A820P p.L851P p.F952C p.R1114C p.R1114H p.R1114P p.S1121W p.M1127T p.T1130M p.R1138W p.R1138Q p.R1138P p.G1203D p.R1221C p.D1238H p.Y1239H p.V1298F p.T1301I p.G1302R p.A1303P p.G1311E p.R1314W p.R1314Q p.G1321S p.D1326N p.L1335P p.R1339C p.P1346S p.Q1347H p.G1354R p.R1357W p.D1361N p.K1394N p.E1400K p.S1403R p.I1424T p.R1459C Klassifikation Lokalisation Gen Protein Nonsense Exon 9 Exon 12 Exon 17 Exon 18 Exon 23 Exon 24 Exon 24 Exon 26 Exon 26 Exon 27 Exon 29 c.1132CaT c.1552CaT c.2247CaT c.2304CaA c.3088CaT c.3421CaT c.3490CaT c.3668GaA c.3709CaT c.3823CaT c.4192CaT p.Q378X p.R518X p.Q749X p.Y768X p.R1030X p.R1141X p.R1164X p.W1223X p.Q1237X p.R1275X p.R1398X Spleißstellen Intron 21 Intron 25 Intron 26 c.2787+1GaT c.3634-3CaA c.3736-1GaA Insertion Exon 8 Exon 25 Exon 30 c.938-939insT c.3544dupC c.4220insAGAA Deletion Exon 2 Exon 2 Exon 3 Exon 8 Exon 9 Exon 16 Exon 16 Exon 18 Exon 19 Exon 22 Exon 27 Exon 29 Exon 29 Exon 30 Exon 31 c.179del9 c.179-195del c.220-222del c.960delC c.1088-1120del c.1944del22 c.1995delG c.2322delC c.2542delG c.2835-2850del16 c.3775delT c.4101delC c.4182delG c.4318delA c.4434delA Intragenische Deletion Exon 15 Exon 18 Exon 23-29 delEx15 delEx18 delEx23-29 Intergenische Deletion ABCC6 delABCC6 Fazit für die Praxis Eine spezifische Behandlung der Grunderkrankung ist nicht bekannt.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 16763870:272:1391
status: NEW[hide] Transcriptional regulation of the ABCC6 gene and t... Front Genet. 2013 Mar 11;4:27. doi: 10.3389/fgene.2013.00027. eCollection 2013. Aranyi T, Bacquet C, de Boussac H, Ratajewski M, Pomozi V, Fulop K, Brampton CN, Pulaski L, Le Saux O, Varadi A
Transcriptional regulation of the ABCC6 gene and the background of impaired function of missense disease-causing mutations.
Front Genet. 2013 Mar 11;4:27. doi: 10.3389/fgene.2013.00027. eCollection 2013., [PMID:23483032]
Abstract [show]
The human ATP-binding cassette family C member 6 (ABCC6) gene encodes an ABC transporter protein expressed primarily in the liver and to a lesser extent in the kidneys and the intestines. We review here the mechanisms of this restricted tissue-specific expression and the role of hepatocyte nuclear factor 4alpha which is responsible for the expression pattern. Detailed analyses uncovered further regulators of the expression of the gene pointing to an intronic primate-specific regulator region, an activator of the expression of the gene by binding CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein beta, which interacts with other proteins acting in the proximal promoter. This regulatory network is affected by various environmental stimuli including oxidative stress and the extracellular signal-regulated protein kinases 1 and 2 pathway. We also review here the structural and functional consequences of disease-causing missense mutations of ABCC6. A significant clustering of the missense disease-causing mutations was found at the domain-domain interfaces. This clustering means that the domain contacts are much less permissive to amino acid replacements than the rest of the protein. We summarize the experimental methods resulting in the identification of mutants with preserved transport activity but failure in intracellular targeting. These mutants are candidates for functional rescue by chemical chaperons. The results of such research can provide the basis of future allele-specific therapy of ABCC6-mediated disorders like pseudoxanthoma elasticum or the generalized arterial calcification in infancy.
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No. Sentence Comment
56 Five missense mutations, V1298F and G1321S in the C-proximal ABC domain and R1138Q, R1314W, and R1339C at the transmission interface were included into the study.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 23483032:56:25
status: NEW63 Two of the variants (V1298F and G1321S) were found to be inactive, though they were capable of binding MgATP, their capacity to form a catalytic intermediate ("occluded nucleotide state") was impaired.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 23483032:63:21
status: NEW66 The same was true for mutants G1321S, R1338Q, and R1314W, while the inactive V1298F was found mostly in the plasma membrane.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 23483032:66:77
status: NEW71 Only the inactive V1298F mutant showed plasma membrane localization at a similar high level as the wt.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 23483032:71:18
status: NEW74 ABCC6 variant Stability in Sf9 MgATP-binding ATPase catalytic intermediate Transport activity (% of WT) Plasma membrane localization in MDCKII cells Plasma membrane localization in mouse liver Intracellular localization in mouse liver WT Stable Yes Yes 100 +++++ +++++ - DABCC6 Stable n.d. n.d. <10 - - +++++ R1138Q Stable Yes Yes ~85 ++++ ++ +++ V1298F Stable Yes No <10 +++++ +++++ - G1321S Stable Yes No <10 - - +++++ R1314W Stable Yes Yes ~90 - + ++++ (ER) R1339C Unstable n.a. n.a. n.a. - - +++++ n.d., not determined; n.a., not applicable; ER, mostly retained with the endoplasmic reticulum.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 23483032:74:347
status: NEW80 Most probably the dramatically reduced transport activity of mutants V1298F and G1321S is the molecular background of the disease in patients with these variants (irrespective that in the case of the former one the correct plasma membrane targeting is preserved).
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 23483032:80:69
status: NEW[hide] ABCC6 prevents ectopic mineralization seen in pseu... Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2013 Dec 10;110(50):20206-11. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1319582110. Epub 2013 Nov 25. Jansen RS, Kucukosmanoglu A, de Haas M, Sapthu S, Otero JA, Hegman IE, Bergen AA, Gorgels TG, Borst P, van de Wetering K
ABCC6 prevents ectopic mineralization seen in pseudoxanthoma elasticum by inducing cellular nucleotide release.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2013 Dec 10;110(50):20206-11. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1319582110. Epub 2013 Nov 25., [PMID:24277820]
Abstract [show]
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by progressive ectopic mineralization of the skin, eyes, and arteries, for which no effective treatment exists. PXE is caused by inactivating mutations in the gene encoding ATP-binding cassette sub-family C member 6 (ABCC6), an ATP-dependent efflux transporter present mainly in the liver. Abcc6(-/-) mice have been instrumental in demonstrating that PXE is a metabolic disease caused by the absence of an unknown factor in the circulation, the presence of which depends on ABCC6 in the liver. Why absence of this factor results in PXE has remained a mystery. Here we report that medium from HEK293 cells overexpressing either human or rat ABCC6 potently inhibits mineralization in vitro, whereas medium from HEK293 control cells does not. Untargeted metabolomics revealed that cells expressing ABCC6 excrete large amounts of nucleoside triphosphates, even though ABCC6 itself does not transport nucleoside triphosphates. Extracellularly, ectonucleotidases hydrolyze the excreted nucleoside triphosphates to nucleoside monophosphates and inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi), a strong inhibitor of mineralization that plays a pivotal role in several mineralization disorders similar to PXE. The in vivo relevance of our data are demonstrated in Abcc6(-/-) mice, which had plasma PPi levels <40% of those found in WT mice. This study provides insight into how ABCC6 affects PXE. Our data indicate that the factor that normally prevents PXE is PPi, which is provided to the circulation in the form of nucleoside triphosphates via an as-yet unidentified but ABCC6-dependent mechanism.
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No. Sentence Comment
84 hABCC6V1298F is properly routed to the plasma membrane, but its transport activity is <10% of that of WT hABCC6 owing to the V1298F mutation in one of its ATP-binding domains (12, 20).
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24277820:84:125
status: NEW180 The V1298F mutation was introduced into hABCC6 with the Quick Change II Site-Directed Mutagenesis Kit (Agilent), using the following primers: 5'-GAAGGTGGGCATCTTTGGCAGGACCGG-3' (forward) and 5'-CCGGTCCTGCCAAAGATGCCCACCTTC-3' (reverse).
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24277820:180:4
status: NEW[hide] Analysis of pseudoxanthoma elasticum-causing misse... J Invest Dermatol. 2014 Apr;134(4):946-53. doi: 10.1038/jid.2013.482. Epub 2013 Nov 11. Pomozi V, Brampton C, Fulop K, Chen LH, Apana A, Li Q, Uitto J, Le Saux O, Varadi A
Analysis of pseudoxanthoma elasticum-causing missense mutants of ABCC6 in vivo; pharmacological correction of the mislocalized proteins.
J Invest Dermatol. 2014 Apr;134(4):946-53. doi: 10.1038/jid.2013.482. Epub 2013 Nov 11., [PMID:24352041]
Abstract [show]
Mutations in the ABCC6 gene cause soft-tissue calcification in pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) and, in some patients, generalized arterial calcification of infancy (GACI). PXE is characterized by late onset and progressive mineralization of elastic fibers in dermal, ocular, and cardiovascular tissues. GACI patients present a more severe, often prenatal arterial calcification. We have tested 10 frequent disease-causing ABCC6 missense mutants for the transport activity by using Sf9 (Spodoptera frugiperda) cells, characterized the subcellular localization in MDCKII (Madin-Darby canine kidney (cell line)) cells and in mouse liver, and tested the phenotypic rescue in zebrafish. We aimed at identifying mutants with preserved transport activity but with improper plasma membrane localization for rescue by the chemical chaperone 4-phenylbutyrate (4-PBA). Seven of the mutants were transport-competent but mislocalized in mouse liver. The observed divergence in cellular localization of mutants in MDCKII cells versus mouse liver underlined the limitations of this 2D in vitro cell system. The functionality of ABCC6 mutants was tested in zebrafish, and minimal rescue of the morpholino-induced phenotype was found. However, 4-PBA, a drug approved for clinical use, restored the plasma membrane localization of four ABCC6 mutants (R1114P, S1121W, Q1347H, and R1314W), suggesting that allele-specific therapy may be useful for selected patients with PXE and GACI.
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No. Sentence Comment
47 Two missense variants (V1298F and G1321S) showed very little, if any, transport activity (Ilia &#b4;s et al., 2002).
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24352041:47:23
status: NEW55 In nonpolarized cells, only S1121W and the transport-deficient V1298F were targeted to the plasma membrane.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24352041:55:63
status: NEW64 The R1459C and the transport- inactive V1298F mutants were found in subcellular localization identical to the wt, whereas all the other mutants showed various degrees of intracellular localization, as illustrated in Figure 3, column 1.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24352041:64:39
status: NEW74 The efficacy of S1121W was somewhat better (7.9%), whereas that of the V1298F was significantly higher (32.0%).
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24352041:74:71
status: NEW78 Note that this type of experiment was not performed in vivo with the two inactive mutants, V1298F and G1321S, or with R1459C, as this mutant was found in the plasma membrane without 4-PBA treatment.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24352041:78:91
status: NEW82 No 4-PBA-induced plasma membrane rescue was observed for R1138Q and T1301I in mouse liver, whereas Extracellular Walker B Q-loop Signature Missense mutations Intercellular 140 ABCC6 wt V1298F G1321S R1114P R1138Q R1314W R1459C S1121W T1301I Q1347H delABCC6 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 LTC4 transport activity (%) TMD0 L0 TMD1 L1 TMD2 R1114P S1121W R1138Q T1301I R1314W G1321S R1339C R1459C Q1347H Figure 1.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24352041:82:185
status: NEW113 MDCKII cell line in vitro Nonpolarized - 4-PBA 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m 20 &#b5;m Wild type R1114P S1121W R1138Q V1298F T1301I R1314W G1321S R1339C Q1347H R1459C deltaABCC6 - 4-PBA + 4-PBA + 4-PBA Not determined Polarized intended to correct their cellular localization, as described previously (Le Saux et al., 2011).
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24352041:113:478
status: NEW126 Mouse liver in vivo - 4-PBA Not determined Not determined Not determined Wild type R1114P S1121W R1138Q V1298F T1301I R1314W G1321S R1339C Q1347H R1459C deltaABCC6 + 4-PBA Figure 4.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24352041:126:104
status: NEW137 Minimal level of rescue was provided by the disease-causing mutants (07.9%) irrespective of their transport activity or their cellular localization, with the exception of V1298F (32.0%; Table 1).
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24352041:137:171
status: NEW139 We hypothesized that V1298F probably possesses some residual transport activity of the endogenous zebrafish substrate.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24352041:139:21
status: NEW150 Summary of the characterization and rescue of disease-causing ABCC6 mutants Localization in mouse liver Localization in MDCKII cell line Nonpolarized Polarized ABCC6 variant Sf9 transport activity Without treatment After 4-PBA treatment Without treatment After 4-PBA treatment Without treatment After 4-PBA treatment Zebrafish &#fe; mRNA rescue (%) Wild type Active PM1 PM PM PM PM PM 90.6 R1114P Active IC4PM PM (rescue) ICoPM PM (rescue) PM PM 0.0 S1121W Active IC4PM PM (rescue) PM PM PM PM 7.9 R1138Q Active IC4PM IC4PM (no effect) IC PM (rescue) PM PM 1.8 V1298F o20% PM ND PM PM PM ND 32.0 T1301I Active IC4PM IC4PM (no effect) IC4PM PM (rescue) PM PM 5.1 R1314W1 Active IC4PM PM (rescue) IC PM (rescue) IC4PM PM (rescue) 0.0 G1321S o20% IC ND IC4PM IC4PM (no effect) IC IC (no effect) 0.0 R1339C Not stable IC IC (no effect) IC IC (no effect) IC IC (no effect) 0.0 Q1347H Active IC4PM PM (rescue) IC4PM PM (rescue) IC &#bc; PM IC&#bc; PM (no effect) 0.8 R1459C Active PM ND IC &#bc; PM PM (rescue) ICoPM ICoPM (no effect) 0.0 delABCC6 o20% IC IC IC IC IC IC ND R1141X Stop ND ND ND ND ND ND 4.8 Abbreviations: IC, intracellular; ND, not determined; PM, plasma membrane.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24352041:150:561
status: NEW[hide] The level of hepatic ABCC6 expression determines t... Am J Pathol. 2014 Jan;184(1):159-70. Brampton C, Aherrahrou Z, Chen LH, Martin L, Bergen AA, Gorgels TG, Erdmann J, Schunkert H, Szabo Z, Varadi A, Le Saux O
The level of hepatic ABCC6 expression determines the severity of calcification after cardiac injury.
Am J Pathol. 2014 Jan;184(1):159-70., [PMID:24479134]
Abstract [show]
Because vascular or cardiac mineralization is inversely correlated with morbidity and long-term survival, we investigated the role of ABCC6 in the calcification response to cardiac injury in mice. By using two models of infarction, nonischemic cryoinjury and the pathologically relevant coronary artery ligation, we confirmed a large propensity to acute cardiac mineralization in Abcc6-/- mice. Furthermore, when the expression of ABCC6 was reduced to approximately 38% of wild-type levels in Abcc6+/- mice, no calcium deposits in injured cardiac tissue were observed. In addition, we used a gene therapy approach to deliver a functional human ABCC6 via hydrodynamic tail vein injection to approximately 13% of mouse hepatocytes, significantly reducing the calcification response to cardiac cryoinjury. We observed that the level and distribution of known regulators of mineralization, such as osteopontin and matrix Gla protein, but not osteocalcin, were concomitant to the level of hepatic expression of human and mouse ABCC6. We notably found that undercarboxylated matrix Gla protein precisely colocalized within areas of mineralization, whereas osteopontin was more diffusely distributed in the area of injury, suggesting a prominent association for matrix Gla protein and osteopontin in ABCC6-related dystrophic cardiac calcification. This study showed that the expression of ABCC6 in liver is an important determinant of calcification in cardiac tissues in response to injuries and is associated with changes in the expression patterns of regulators of mineralization.
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No. Sentence Comment
117 We also compared the cryoinjury calcification after the transient expression of the WT ABCC6 and the inactive mutant, V1298F, for various control mice and at 4 weeks after injury.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24479134:117:118
status: NEW136 To firmly attribute the reduction of calcification to ABCC6 function, we repeated the cryoinjury procedure with Abcc6/ mice subjected to HTVI with a plasmid carrying the human ABCC6 cDNA with the PXE-causing p.V1298F mutation.7 We have previously found this mutant to be transport inactive but fully integrated to the plasma membrane.34 As expected, the high calcification ratio was similar to the non-treated Abcc6/ mice (Figure 3A), indicating that the calcification rescue was, in fact, due to a functional human ABCC6.
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ABCC6 p.Val1298Phe 24479134:136:212
status: NEW