In Vitro Knock-Down of Myh9 Leads to a Myh9-Related Disorder Phenotype in Human Megakaryocytes.

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 4596-4596
Author(s):  
Yolande Chen ◽  
Siham Boukour ◽  
Monia Romdhane ◽  
Ababacar Seye ◽  
Olivier Bluteau ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4596 Normal platelet production is dependent on the formation of branched long cytoplasmic extensions, called proplatelets (PPT). Mutations of the Myh9 gene (encoding for the nonmuscle myosin heavy chain IIA) result in autosomal dominant disorders, where patients develop various degrees of macrothrombocytopenia, with sometimes glomerular impairment, hearing loss and cataracts. There has been questioning as to whether the mechanism for the macrothrombocytopenia is haploinsufficiency, or a dominant negative effect of the mutated gene. We performed an in vitro study to investigate PPF from patient megakaryocytes (MK). By this approach, a decrease in PPF from patient CD34 derived MKs was observed in comparison to normal cultured MK. Surprisingly this defect of PPF observed in patients was rescued by blebbistatin, an inhibitor of class II myosin. Immunofluorescence studies performed showed that besides clusterization of GPIb in patient's platelets, no major repartition abnormalities were seen in cultured MKs derived from patient's CD34 for myosin, actin, tubulin, vWF, and Rac (except in one patient where actin and Rac formed aggregates to some extend, in a small number of MKs). In order to better understand the role of myosin during normal and abnormal PPF, we used a shRNA strategy to disrupt the Myh9 expression during normal MK differentiation and compared shRNA-treated MKs with MKs derived from patient CD34. Megakaryocytes treated with a shRNA that knocks down the protein of about 50%, did not alter MK ploidization, but decreased in vitro PPF, as previously observed for cells issued from patients. Moreover, shRNA-treated MKs exhibited the same ultrastructural abnormalities as patient MKs. Addition of Blebbistatin to shRNA treated MKs led to an increase of PPF, suggesting that the remaining myosin II might be hyperactivated and inhibit PPF. Altogether this study strongly suggests that the thrombocytopenia of the Myh9 syndrome is essentially related to haploinsufficiency in myosin II. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Genetics ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 162 (2) ◽  
pp. 633-645 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guido Cuperus ◽  
David Shore

Abstract We previously described two classes of SIR2 mutations specifically defective in either telomeric/HM silencing (class I) or rDNA silencing (class II) in S. cerevisiae. Here we report the identification of genes whose protein products, when either overexpressed or directly tethered to the locus in question, can establish silencing in SIR2 class I mutants. Elevated dosage of SCS2, previously implicated as a regulator of both inositol biosynthesis and telomeric silencing, suppressed the dominant-negative effect of a SIR2-143 mutation. In a genetic screen for proteins that restore silencing when tethered to a telomere, we isolated ESC2 and an uncharacterized gene, (YOL017w), which we call ESC8. Both Esc2p and Esc8p interact with Sir2p in two-hybrid assays, and the Esc8p-Sir2 interaction is detected in vitro. Interestingly, Esc8p has a single close homolog in yeast, the ISW1-complex factor Ioc3p, and has also been copurified with Isw1p, raising the possibility that Esc8p is a component of an Isw1p-containing nucleosome remodeling complex. Whereas esc2 and esc8 deletion mutants alone have only marginal silencing defects, cells lacking Isw1p show a strong silencing defect at HMR but not at telomeres. Finally, we show that Esc8p interacts with the Gal11 protein, a component of the RNA pol II mediator complex.


Blood ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 93 (12) ◽  
pp. 4154-4166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert L. Ilaria ◽  
Robert G. Hawley ◽  
Richard A. Van Etten

Abstract STAT5 is a member of the signal transducers and activation of transcription (STAT) family of latent transcription factors activated in a variety of cytokine signaling pathways. We introduced alanine substitution mutations in highly conserved regions of murine STAT5A and studied the mutants for dimerization, DNA binding, transactivation, and dominant negative effects on erythropoietin-induced STAT5-dependent transcriptional activation. The mutations included two near the amino-terminus (W255KR→AAA and R290QQ→AAA), two in the DNA-binding domain (E437E→AA and V466VV→AAA), and a carboxy-terminal truncation of STAT5A (STAT5A/▵53C) analogous to a naturally occurring isoform of rat STAT5B. All of the STAT mutant proteins were tyrosine phosphorylated by JAK2 and heterodimerized with STAT5B except for the WKR mutant, suggesting an important role for this region in STAT5 for stabilizing dimerization. The WKR, EE, and VVV mutants had no detectable DNA-binding activity, and the WKR and VVV mutants, but not EE, were defective in transcriptional induction. The VVV mutant had a moderate dominant negative effect on erythropoietin-induced STAT5 transcriptional activation, which was likely due to the formation of heterodimers that are defective in DNA binding. Interestingly, the WKR mutant had a potent dominant negative effect, comparable to the transactivation domain deletion mutant, ▵53C. Stable expression of either the WKR or ▵53C STAT5 mutants in the murine myeloid cytokine-dependent cell line 32D inhibited both interleukin-3–dependent proliferation and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)–dependent differentiation, without induction of apoptosis. Expression of these mutants in primary murine bone marrow inhibited G-CSF–dependent granulocyte colony formation in vitro. These results demonstrate that mutations in distinct regions of STAT5 exert dominant negative effects on cytokine signaling, likely through different mechanisms, and suggest a role for STAT5 in proliferation and differentiation of myeloid cells.


Genes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 875
Author(s):  
Karlijn Pellikaan ◽  
Geeske M. van Woerden ◽  
Lotte Kleinendorst ◽  
Anna G. W. Rosenberg ◽  
Bernhard Horsthemke ◽  
...  

Prader–Willi syndrome (PWS) is a rare genetic condition characterized by hypotonia, intellectual disability, and hypothalamic dysfunction, causing pituitary hormone deficiencies and hyperphagia, ultimately leading to obesity. PWS is most often caused by the loss of expression of a cluster of genes on chromosome 15q11.2-13. Patients with Prader–Willi-like syndrome (PWLS) display features of the PWS phenotype without a classical PWS genetic defect. We describe a 46-year-old patient with PWLS, including hypotonia, intellectual disability, hyperphagia, and pituitary hormone deficiencies. Routine genetic tests for PWS were normal, but a homozygous missense variant NM_003097.3(SNRPN):c.193C>T, p.(Arg65Trp) was identified. Single nucleotide polymorphism array showed several large regions of homozygosity, caused by high-grade consanguinity between the parents. Our functional analysis, the ‘Pipeline for Rapid in silico, in vivo, in vitro Screening of Mutations’ (PRiSM) screen, showed that overexpression of SNRPN-p.Arg65Trp had a dominant negative effect, strongly suggesting pathogenicity. However, it could not be confirmed that the variant was responsible for the phenotype of the patient. In conclusion, we present a unique homozygous missense variant in SNURF-SNRPN in a patient with PWLS. We describe the diagnostic trajectory of this patient and the possible contributors to her phenotype in light of the current literature on the genotype–phenotype relationship in PWS.


2021 ◽  
pp. 002203452199662
Author(s):  
J.T. Chen ◽  
C.H. Lin ◽  
H.W. Huang ◽  
Y.P. Wang ◽  
P.C. Kao ◽  
...  

Hereditary gingival fibromatosis (HGF) is a rare genetic disorder featured by nonsyndromic pathological overgrowth of gingiva. The excessive gingival tissues can cause dental, masticatory, and phonetic problems, which impose severe functional and esthetic burdens on affected individuals. Due to its high recurrent rate, patients with HGF have to undergo repeated surgical procedures of gingival resection, from childhood to adulthood, which significantly compromises their quality of life. Unraveling the genetic etiology and molecular pathogenesis of HGF not only gains insight into gingival physiology and homeostasis but also opens avenues for developing potential therapeutic strategies for this disorder. Recently, mutations in REST (OMIM *600571), encoding a transcription repressor, were reported to cause HGF (GINGF5; OMIM #617626) in 3 Turkish families. However, the functions of REST in gingival homeostasis and pathogenesis of REST-associated HGF remain largely unknown. In this study, we characterized 2 HGF families and identified 2 novel REST mutations, c.2449C>T (p.Arg817*) and c.2771_2793dup (p.Glu932Lysfs*3). All 5 mutations reported to date are nonsenses or frameshifts in the last exon of REST and would presumably truncate the protein. In vitro reporter gene assays demonstrated a partial or complete loss of repressor activity for these truncated RESTs. When coexpressed with the full-length protein, the truncated RESTs impaired the repressive ability of wild-type REST, suggesting a dominant negative effect. Immunofluorescent studies showed nuclear localization of overexpressed wild-type and truncated RESTs in vitro, indicating preservation of the nuclear localization signal in shortened proteins. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated a comparable pattern of ubiquitous REST expression in both epithelium and lamina propria of normal and HGF gingival tissues despite a reduced reactivity in HGF gingiva. Results of this study confirm the pathogenicity of REST truncation mutations occurring in the last exon causing HGF and suggest the pathosis is caused by an antimorphic (dominant negative) disease mechanism.


eLife ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Dean Heckman ◽  
Maria H Chahrour ◽  
Huda Y Zoghbi

Loss of function of the X-linked gene encoding methyl-CpG binding protein 2 (MeCP2) causes the progressive neurological disorder Rett syndrome (RTT). Conversely, duplication or triplication of Xq28 causes an equally wide-ranging progressive neurological disorder, MECP2 duplication syndrome, whose features overlap somewhat with RTT. To understand which MeCP2 functions cause toxicity in the duplication syndrome, we generated mouse models expressing endogenous Mecp2 along with a RTT-causing mutation in either the methyl-CpG binding domain (MBD) or the transcriptional repression domain (TRD). We determined that both the MBD and TRD must function for doubling MeCP2 to be toxic. Mutating the MBD reproduces the null phenotype and expressing the TRD mutant produces milder RTT phenotypes, yet both mutations are harmless when expressed with endogenous Mecp2. Surprisingly, mutating the TRD is more detrimental than deleting the entire C-terminus, indicating a dominant-negative effect on MeCP2 function, likely due to the disruption of a basic cluster.


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (9) ◽  
pp. 3546-3555 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kimberli J. Kamer ◽  
Wei Jiang ◽  
Virendar K. Kaushik ◽  
Vamsi K. Mootha ◽  
Zenon Grabarek

The mitochondrial uniporter is a Ca2+-channel complex resident within the organelle’s inner membrane. In mammalian cells the uniporter’s activity is regulated by Ca2+ due to concerted action of MICU1 and MICU2, two paralogous, but functionally distinct, EF-hand Ca2+-binding proteins. Here we present the X-ray structure of the apo form of Mus musculus MICU2 at 2.5-Å resolution. The core structure of MICU2 is very similar to that of MICU1. It consists of two lobes, each containing one canonical Ca2+-binding EF-hand (EF1, EF4) and one structural EF-hand (EF2, EF3). Two molecules of MICU2 form a symmetrical dimer stabilized by highly conserved hydrophobic contacts between exposed residues of EF1 of one monomer and EF3 of another. Similar interactions stabilize MICU1 dimers, allowing exchange between homo- and heterodimers. The tight EF1–EF3 interface likely accounts for the structural and functional coupling between the Ca2+-binding sites in MICU1, MICU2, and their complex that leads to the previously reported Ca2+-binding cooperativity and dominant negative effect of mutation of the Ca2+-binding sites in either protein. The N- and C-terminal segments of the two proteins are distinctly different. In MICU2 the C-terminal helix is significantly longer than in MICU1, and it adopts a more rigid structure. MICU2’s C-terminal helix is dispensable in vitro for its interaction with MICU1 but required for MICU2’s function in cells. We propose that in the MICU1–MICU2 oligomeric complex the C-terminal helices of both proteins form a central semiautonomous assembly which contributes to the gating mechanism of the uniporter.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 2426-2426
Author(s):  
Kyle R Spinler ◽  
Jae-Won Shin ◽  
Dennis E Discher

Abstract Megakaryocytes (MKs) in the marrow extend projections into blood flow and generate platelets under shear. Understanding MK differentiation and platelet production is of broad clinical importance and extends a need to augment platelet numbers in patients. Reversible but sustained inhibition of non-muscle myosin-II (NMM-II) with the drug blebbistatin increases MK polyploidization, proplatelet formation, and membrane flexibility, thereby increasing platelet generation under shear. Using a cone and plate rheometer to apply fluid shear to drug-treated MKs in bulk, platelet-like-particles (PLPs) that are collagen-I responsive can be generated with intermediate shear. The MKs naturally down-regulate NMM-IIA activity through phosphorylation of S1943, but this site proves shear sensitive, consistent with results for human platelets. Using micropipette aspiration of MKs, inhibition of NMM-IIA is found necessary to generate CD41+ fragments that approximate the size of human platelets. Localization of NMM-IIA to the fragments is modulated by S1943 as seen by unique distribution patterns resulting from specific S1943 mutations that can be abrogated by addition of blebbistatin. The approach is extended to clinically relevant mutations associated with May-Hegglin anomaly (MHA) co-expressed with wild type protein to mimic heterozygotes. As with blebbistatin inhibition of myosin, May-Hegglin mutants result in a higher frequency of fragmentation during micropipette aspiration, indicating a dominant negative effect. Immunofluorescence documents abnormal myosin aggregation in cells transfected with May-Hegglin myosin mutations compared to wild type constructs. Finally, peripheral blood from a patient with a D1414N May-Hegglin mutation is cultured to produce megakaryocytes used to support both the micropipette and immunofluorescence results. These findings reveal a phospho-switch in NMM-II, from inactive to active in the terminal stages of platelet-poiesis, and that proper myosin activity is critical to fragment size and number. Disruption of normal activity enhances fragment generation suggesting a novel mechanism in MHA: in particular, MHA thrombocytopenia results in an increased thrombocrit due to abnormally large platelets, which overcompensates for the reduction in platelet number. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 93 (12) ◽  
pp. 4154-4166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert L. Ilaria ◽  
Robert G. Hawley ◽  
Richard A. Van Etten

STAT5 is a member of the signal transducers and activation of transcription (STAT) family of latent transcription factors activated in a variety of cytokine signaling pathways. We introduced alanine substitution mutations in highly conserved regions of murine STAT5A and studied the mutants for dimerization, DNA binding, transactivation, and dominant negative effects on erythropoietin-induced STAT5-dependent transcriptional activation. The mutations included two near the amino-terminus (W255KR→AAA and R290QQ→AAA), two in the DNA-binding domain (E437E→AA and V466VV→AAA), and a carboxy-terminal truncation of STAT5A (STAT5A/▵53C) analogous to a naturally occurring isoform of rat STAT5B. All of the STAT mutant proteins were tyrosine phosphorylated by JAK2 and heterodimerized with STAT5B except for the WKR mutant, suggesting an important role for this region in STAT5 for stabilizing dimerization. The WKR, EE, and VVV mutants had no detectable DNA-binding activity, and the WKR and VVV mutants, but not EE, were defective in transcriptional induction. The VVV mutant had a moderate dominant negative effect on erythropoietin-induced STAT5 transcriptional activation, which was likely due to the formation of heterodimers that are defective in DNA binding. Interestingly, the WKR mutant had a potent dominant negative effect, comparable to the transactivation domain deletion mutant, ▵53C. Stable expression of either the WKR or ▵53C STAT5 mutants in the murine myeloid cytokine-dependent cell line 32D inhibited both interleukin-3–dependent proliferation and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)–dependent differentiation, without induction of apoptosis. Expression of these mutants in primary murine bone marrow inhibited G-CSF–dependent granulocyte colony formation in vitro. These results demonstrate that mutations in distinct regions of STAT5 exert dominant negative effects on cytokine signaling, likely through different mechanisms, and suggest a role for STAT5 in proliferation and differentiation of myeloid cells.


2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (48) ◽  
pp. 12731-12736 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rui Zhou ◽  
Guanghui Yang ◽  
Yigong Shi

γ-secretase is an intramembrane protease complex consisting of nicastrin, presenilin-1/2, APH-1a/b, and Pen-2. Hydrolysis of the 99-residue transmembrane fragment of amyloid precursor protein (APP-C99) by γ-secretase produces β-amyloid (Aβ) peptides. Pathogenic mutations in PSEN1 and PSEN2, which encode the catalytic subunit presenilin-1/2 of γ-secretase, lead to familial Alzheimer’s disease in an autosomal dominant manner. However, the underlying mechanism of how the mutant PSEN gene may affect the function of the WT allele remains to be elucidated. Here we report that each of the loss-of-function γ-secretase variants that carries a PSEN1 mutation suppresses the protease activity of the WT γ-secretase on Aβ production. Each of these γ-secretase variants forms a stable oligomer with the WT γ-secretase in vitro in the presence of the detergent CHAPSO {3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-2-hydroxy-1-propanesulfonate}, but not digitonin. Importantly, robust protease activity of γ-secretase is detectable in the presence of CHAPSO, but not digitonin. These experimental observations suggest a dominant negative effect of the γ-secretase, in which the protease activity of WT γ-secretase is suppressed by the loss-of-function γ-secretase variants through hetero-oligomerization. The relevance of this finding to the genesis of Alzheimer’s disease is critically evaluated.


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