COL11A2 as a candidate gene for vertebral malformations and congenital scoliosis

Author:

Rebello Denise12,Wohler Elizabeth3,Erfani Vida12,Li Guozhuang4,Aguilera Alexya N5,Santiago-Cornier Alberto67,Zhao Sen48,Hwang Steven W9,Steiner Robert D1011,Zhang Terry Jianguo4,Gurnett Christina A12,Raggio Cathleen13,Wu Nan4,Sobreira Nara3,Giampietro Philip F5,Ciruna Brian12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Program in Developmental & Stem Cell Biology, The Hospital for Sick Children , Toronto, Ontario M5G 0A4, Canada

2. The University of Toronto Department of Molecular Genetics, , Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A8, Canada

3. Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine McKusick-Nathans Department of Genetic Medicine, , Baltimore, MD 21205, USA

4. Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Key Laboratory of Big Data for Spinal Deformities, Beijing Key Laboratory for Genetic Research of Skeletal Deformity, State Key Laboratory of Complex Severe and Rare Diseases, , Beijing 100730, China

5. University of Illinois-Chicago Department of Pediatrics, , Chicago, IL 60612, USA

6. San Jorge Children’s and Women’s Hospital Genetic Section, , San Juan, Puerto Rico 00912, USA

7. Ponce Health Sciences University Department of Public Health, , Ponce, Puerto Rico 00912, USA

8. Baylor College of Medicine Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, , Houston, TX 77030, USA

9. Shriners Children’s-Philadelphia , Philadelphia, PA 19140, USA

10. University of Wisconsin Department of Pediatrics, , Madison, WI 54449, USA

11. Marshfield Clinic Health System , Marshfield, WI 54449, USA

12. Washington University in St. Louis Department of Neurology, , St. Louis, MO 63110, USA

13. Hospital for Special Surgery , New York, NY 10021, USA

Abstract

Abstract Human vertebral malformations (VMs) have an estimated incidence of 1/2000 and are associated with significant health problems including congenital scoliosis (CS) and recurrent organ system malformation syndromes such as VACTERL (vertebral anomalies; anal abnormalities; cardiac abnormalities; tracheo-esophageal fistula; renal anomalies; limb anomalies). The genetic cause for the vast majority of VMs are unknown. In a CS/VM patient cohort, three COL11A2 variants (R130W, R1407L and R1413H) were identified in two patients with cervical VM. A third patient with a T9 hemivertebra and the R130W variant was identified from a separate study. These substitutions are predicted to be damaging to protein function, and R130 and R1407 residues are conserved in zebrafish Col11a2. To determine the role for COL11A2 in vertebral development, CRISPR/Cas9 was used to create a nonsense mutation (col11a2L642*) as well as a full gene locus deletion (col11a2del) in zebrafish. Both col11a2L642*/L642* and col11a2del/del mutant zebrafish exhibit vertebral fusions in the caudal spine, which form due to mineralization across intervertebral segments. To determine the functional consequence of VM-associated variants, we assayed their ability to suppress col11a2del VM phenotypes following transgenic expression within the developing spine. While wildtype col11a2 expression suppresses fusions in col11a2del/+ and col11a2del/del backgrounds, patient missense variant-bearing col11a2 failed to rescue the loss-of-function phenotype in these animals. These results highlight an essential role for COL11A2 in vertebral development and support a pathogenic role for two missense variants in CS.

Funder

CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences

National High Level Hospital Clinical Research Funding

Dr Asok K. Ray and Purnima Ray Professorship in Pediatrics

National Institutes of Health

Canada Research Chair program

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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