FAM20A mutations and transcriptome analyses of dental pulp tissues of enamel renal syndrome

Author:

Wang Shih‐Kai12ORCID,Zhang Hong3,Wang Yin‐Lin12,Lin Hung‐Ying4,Seymen Figen5,Koruyucu Mine6,Wright J. Timothy7,Kim Jung‐Wook89ORCID,Simmer James P.3,Hu Jan C.‐C.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dentistry National Taiwan University School of Dentistry Taipei City Taiwan

2. Department of Pediatric Dentistry National Taiwan University Children's Hospital Taipei City Taiwan

3. Department of Biologic and Materials Sciences University of Michigan School of Dentistry Ann Arbor Michigan USA

4. Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery National Taiwan University Hospital Taipei City Taiwan

5. Department of Pedodontics, Faculty of Dentistry Altinbas University Istanbul Turkey

6. Department of Pedodontics, Faculty of Dentistry Istanbul University Istanbul Turkey

7. Department of Pediatric Dentistry University of North Carolina School of Dentistry Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

8. Department of Molecular Genetics & Dental Research Institute, School of Dentistry Seoul National University Seoul Korea

9. Department of Pediatric Dentistry & Dental Research Institute, School of Dentistry Seoul National University Seoul Korea

Abstract

AbstractAimBiallelic loss‐of‐function FAM20A mutations cause amelogenesis imperfecta (AI) type IG, better known as enamel renal syndrome (ERS), characterized by severe enamel hypoplasia, delayed/failed tooth eruption, intrapulpal calcifications, gingival hyperplasia and nephrocalcinosis. FAM20A binds to FAM20C, the Golgi casein kinase (GCK) and potentiates its function to phosphorylate secreted proteins critical for biomineralization. While many FAM20A pathogenic mutations have been reported, the pathogeneses of orodental anomalies in ERS remain to be elucidated. This study aimed to identify disease‐causing mutations for patients with ERS phenotypes and to discern the molecular mechanism underlying ERS intrapulpal calcifications.MethodologyPhenotypic characterization and whole exome analyses were conducted for 8 families and 2 sporadic cases with hypoplastic AI. A minigene assay was performed to investigate the molecular consequences of a FAM20A splice‐site variant. RNA sequencing followed by transcription profiling and gene ontology (GO) analyses were carried out for dental pulp tissues of ERS and the control.ResultsBiallelic FAM20A mutations were demonstrated for each affected individual, including 7 novel pathogenic variants: c.590‐5T>A, c.625T>A (p.Cys209Ser), c.771del (p.Gln258Argfs*28), c.832_835delinsTGTCCGACGGTGTCCGACGGTGTC CA (p.Val278Cysfs*29), c.1232G>A (p.Arg411Gln), c.1297A>G (p.Arg433Gly) and c.1351del (p.Gln451Serfs*4). The c.590‐5T>A splice‐site mutation caused Exon 3 skipping, which resulted in an in‐frame deletion of a unique region of the FAM20A protein, p.(Asp197_Ile214delinsVal). Analyses of differentially expressed genes in ERS pulp tissues demonstrated that genes involved in biomineralization, particularly dentinogenesis, were significantly upregulated, such as DSPP, MMP9, MMP20 and WNT10A. Enrichment analyses indicated overrepresentation of gene sets associated with BMP and SMAD signalling pathways. In contrast, GO terms related to inflammation and axon development were underrepresented. Among BMP signalling genes, BMP agonists GDF7, GDF15, BMP3, BMP8A, BMP8B, BMP4 and BMP6 were upregulated, while BMP antagonists GREM1, BMPER and VWC2 showed decreased expression in ERS dental pulp tissues.ConclusionsUpregulation of BMP signalling underlies intrapulpal calcifications in ERS. FAM20A plays an essential role in pulp tissue homeostasis and prevention of ectopic mineralization in soft tissues. This critical function probably depends upon MGP (matrix Gla protein), a potent mineralization inhibitor that must be properly phosphorylated by FAM20A‐FAM20C kinase complex.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan

National Institutes of Health

National Research Foundation of Korea

National Taiwan University Hospital

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Dentistry

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