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Delayed transport of tissue-nonspecific alkaline phosphatase with missense mutations causing hypophosphatasia
Authors:Brun-Heath Isabelle  Lia-Baldini Anne-Sophie  Maillard Stéphane  Taillandier Agnès  Utsch Boris  Nunes Mark E  Serre Jean-Louis  Mornet Etienne
Institution:Isabelle Brun-Heath, Anne-Sophie Lia-Baldini, Stéphane Maillard, Agnès Taillandier, Boris Utsch, Mark E. Nunes, Jean-Louis Serre,Etienne Mornet,
Abstract:Hypophosphatasia is a rare genetic disease characterized by diminished bone and tooth mineralization due to deficient activity of tissue-nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (TNSALP). The disease is clinically heterogeneous due to different mutations in the TNSALP gene. In order to determine whether mutated TNSALP proteins may be sequestered, degraded, or subjected to delay in their transport to the cell membrane, we built a plasmid expressing a YFP–TNSALP fluorescent fusion protein allowing the observation of cellular localization in live cells by fluorescence confocal microscopy at different time points after transfection. We studied five mutants (c. 571G > A, c. 653T > C, c. 746G > T, c. 1363G > A and c. 1468A > T) exhibiting various levels of in vitro residual enzymatic activity. While the wild-type protein reached the membrane within the first 24 h after transfection, the mutants reached the membrane with delays of 24, 48 or 72 h. For all of the tested mutations, accumulation of the mutated proteins, mainly in the Golgi apparatus, was observed. We concluded that reduced ALP activity of these TNSALP mutants results from structural disturbances and delay in membrane anchoring, and not from compromised catalytic activity.
Keywords:Hypophosphatasia  Mineralization  Phenotype–  genotype correlation  Membrane anchoring  Missense mutation
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