Dominant negative variants in KIF5B cause osteogenesis imperfecta via down regulation of mTOR signaling
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Published:2023-11-07
Issue:11
Volume:19
Page:e1011005
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ISSN:1553-7404
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Container-title:PLOS Genetics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:PLoS Genet
Author:
Marom RonitORCID, Zhang BoORCID, Washington Megan E.ORCID, Song I-WenORCID, Burrage Lindsay C.ORCID, Rossi Vittoria C., Berrier Ava S., Lindsey AnikaORCID, Lesinski Jacob, Nonet Michael L., Chen Jian, Baldridge DustinORCID, Silverman Gary A.ORCID, Sutton V. Reid, Rosenfeld Jill A.ORCID, Tran Alyssa A., Hicks M. John, Murdock David R., Dai Hongzheng, Weis MaryAnn, Jhangiani Shalini N., Muzny Donna M., Gibbs Richard A., Caswell RichardORCID, Pottinger Carrie, Cilliers DeirdreORCID, Stals Karen, Eyre David, Krakow Deborah, Schedl TimORCID, Pak Stephen C.ORCID, Lee Brendan H.ORCID,
Abstract
Background
Kinesin motor proteins transport intracellular cargo, including mRNA, proteins, and organelles. Pathogenic variants in kinesin-related genes have been implicated in neurodevelopmental disorders and skeletal dysplasias. We identified de novo, heterozygous variants in KIF5B, encoding a kinesin-1 subunit, in four individuals with osteogenesis imperfecta. The variants cluster within the highly conserved kinesin motor domain and are predicted to interfere with nucleotide binding, although the mechanistic consequences on cell signaling and function are unknown.
Methods
To understand the in vivo genetic mechanism of KIF5B variants, we modeled the p.Thr87Ile variant that was found in two patients in the C. elegans ortholog, unc-116, at the corresponding position (Thr90Ile) by CRISPR/Cas9 editing and performed functional analysis. Next, we studied the cellular and molecular consequences of the recurrent p.Thr87Ile variant by microscopy, RNA and protein analysis in NIH3T3 cells, primary human fibroblasts and bone biopsy.
Results
C. elegans heterozygous for the unc-116 Thr90Ile variant displayed abnormal body length and motility phenotypes that were suppressed by additional copies of the wild type allele, consistent with a dominant negative mechanism. Time-lapse imaging of GFP-tagged mitochondria showed defective mitochondria transport in unc-116 Thr90Ile neurons providing strong evidence for disrupted kinesin motor function. Microscopy studies in human cells showed dilated endoplasmic reticulum, multiple intracellular vacuoles, and abnormal distribution of the Golgi complex, supporting an intracellular trafficking defect. RNA sequencing, proteomic analysis, and bone immunohistochemistry demonstrated down regulation of the mTOR signaling pathway that was partially rescued with leucine supplementation in patient cells.
Conclusion
We report dominant negative variants in the KIF5B kinesin motor domain in individuals with osteogenesis imperfecta. This study expands the spectrum of kinesin-related disorders and identifies dysregulated signaling targets for KIF5B in skeletal development.
Funder
National Institute of General Medical Sciences National Human Genome Research Institute National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
Cancer Research,Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
2 articles.
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