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Pseudouridylation defect due to DKC1 and NOP10 mutations causes nephrotic syndrome with cataracts, hearing impairment, and enterocolitis

Authors :
Detlef Bockenhauer
François Dragon
Christelle Arrondel
Ákos Szekeres
Kristóf Perczel
Wei-Li Di
Susanne Motameny
Attila Fintha
Maria Kolatsi-Joannou
Eszter Jávorszky
Guillaume Dorval
Salah Marzouk
Kazunori Tomita
Jennifer C. Chandler
Peter Nürnberg
Gusztáv Schay
Veronica A. Kinsler
Ahmed Hossain
Andrea Kerti
András Perczel
Hafsa Hammid
Magdolna Kardos
William Mifsud
Florentina Sava
David Curtis
Corinne Antignac
Felipe D’Arco
Aoife M. Waters
Géraldine Mollet
Mona Tahoun
Gergely Toldi
Tivadar Tulassay
Ana Faro
Anna Szőcs
Jutta Koeglmeier
Kata Kelen
Marwa H. Saied
Holger Thiele
Hywel Williams
Kálmán Tory
Renáta Hamar
Erika Maka
Mario Kaliakatsos
Mariya Moosajee
Gábor Rudas
Máté Varga
Eszter Balogh
Attila Szabo
Dóra K. Menyhárd
Horia Stanescu
Tomas Goncalves
Olivier Gribouval
Regina Légrádi
George S. Reusz
Robert Kleta
Judit Götze
David A. Long
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 117:15137-15147
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2020.

Abstract

RNA modifications play a fundamental role in cellular function. Pseudouridylation, the most abundant RNA modification, is catalyzed by the H/ACA small ribonucleoprotein (snoRNP) complex that shares four core proteins, dyskerin (DKC1), NOP10, NHP2, and GAR1. Mutations in DKC1 , NOP10 , or NHP2 cause dyskeratosis congenita (DC), a disorder characterized by telomere attrition. Here, we report a phenotype comprising nephrotic syndrome, cataracts, sensorineural deafness, enterocolitis, and early lethality in two pedigrees: males with DKC1 p.Glu206Lys and two children with homozygous NOP10 p.Thr16Met. Females with heterozygous DKC1 p.Glu206Lys developed cataracts and sensorineural deafness, but nephrotic syndrome in only one case of skewed X-inactivation. We found telomere attrition in both pedigrees, but no mucocutaneous abnormalities suggestive of DC. Both mutations fall at the dyskerin–NOP10 binding interface in a region distinct from those implicated in DC, impair the dyskerin–NOP10 interaction, and disrupt the catalytic pseudouridylation site. Accordingly, we found reduced pseudouridine levels in the ribosomal RNA (rRNA) of the patients. Zebrafish dkc1 mutants recapitulate the human phenotype and show reduced 18S pseudouridylation, ribosomal dysregulation, and a cell-cycle defect in the absence of telomere attrition. We therefore propose that this human disorder is the consequence of defective snoRNP pseudouridylation and ribosomal dysfunction.

Details

ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
117
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....48c70950ec857554bf1e04d93236b91c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2002328117