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Mutations in KIAA0586 Cause Lethal Ciliopathies Ranging from a Hydrolethalus Phenotype to Short-Rib Polydactyly Syndrome

Authors :
Kevin Piquand
Nadia Elkhartoufi
Patrick Nitschke
Sophie Saunier
Meriem Garfa-Traore
Mathilde Nizon
Caroline Alby
Céline Huber
Marine Legendre
Bettina Bessières
Françoise Clerget-Darpoux
Valérie Cormier-Daire
Fanny Pelluard
Ferechté Encha-Ravazi
Arnold Munnich
André Mégarbané
Nicole Laurent
Tania Attié-Bitach
Salima El Chehadeh-Djebbar
Melinda Zombor
Sophie Thomas
Georges Abi-Tayeh
Laurence Faivre
Amale Ichkou
Michel Vekemans
Hajnalka Szabó
Christine Bole
Marion Failler
Stanislas Lyonnet
László Sztriha
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2015.

Abstract

KIAA0586, the human ortholog of chicken TALPID3, is a centrosomal protein that is essential for primary ciliogenesis. Its disruption in animal models causes defects attributed to abnormal hedgehog signaling; these defects include polydactyly and abnormal dorsoventral patterning of the neural tube. Here, we report homozygous mutations of KIAA0586 in four families affected by lethal ciliopathies ranging from a hydrolethalus phenotype to short-rib polydactyly. We show defective ciliogenesis, as well as abnormal response to SHH-signaling activation in cells derived from affected individuals, consistent with a role of KIAA0586 in primary cilia biogenesis. Whereas centriolar maturation seemed unaffected in mutant cells, we observed an abnormal extended pattern of CEP290, a centriolar satellite protein previously associated with ciliopathies. Our data show the crucial role of KIAA0586 in human primary ciliogenesis and subsequent abnormal hedgehog signaling through abnormal GLI3 processing. Our results thus establish that KIAA0586 mutations cause lethal ciliopathies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....31e43bc3aacda197b6af15ac6a5008b9