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Rescue by elexacaftor-tezacaftor-ivacaftor of the G1244E cystic fibrosis mutation's stability and gating defects are dependent on cell background

Authors :
Valeria Tomati
Stefano Costa
Valeria Capurro
Emanuela Pesce
Cristina Pastorino
Mariateresa Lena
Elvira Sondo
Marco Di Duca
Federico Cresta
Simona Cristadoro
Federico Zara
Luis J.V. Galietta
Renata Bocciardi
Carlo Castellani
Maria Cristina Lucanto
Nicoletta Pedemonte
Tomati, Valeria
Costa, Stefano
Capurro, Valeria
Pesce, Emanuela
Pastorino, Cristina
Lena, Mariateresa
Sondo, Elvira
Di Duca, Marco
Cresta, Federico
Cristadoro, Simona
Zara, Federico
Galietta, Luis Juan Vicente
Bocciardi, Renata
Castellani, Carlo
Lucanto, Maria Cristina
Pedemonte, Nicoletta
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: Cystic fibrosis is caused by mutations impairing expression, trafficking, stability and/or activity of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) chloride channel. The G1244E mutation causes a severe gating defect that it is not completely rescued by ivacaftor but requires the use of a second compound (a co-potentiator). Recently, it has been proposed that the corrector elexacaftor may act also as a co-potentiator. Methods: By using molecular, biochemical and functional analyses we performed an in-depth characterization of the G1244E-CFTR mutant in heterologous and native cell models. Results: Our studies demonstrate that processing and function of the mutant protein, as well as its pharmacological sensitivity, are markedly dependent on cell background. In heterologous expression systems, elexacaftor mainly acted on G1244E-CFTR as a co-potentiator, thus ameliorating the gating defect. On the contrary, in the native nasal epithelial cell model, elexacaftor did not act as a co-potentiator, but it increased mature CFTR expression possibly by improving mutant's defective stability at the plasma membrane. Conclusions: Our study highlights the importance of the cell background in the evaluation of CFTR modulator effects. Further, our results draw attention to the need for the development of novel potentiators having different mechanisms with respect to ivacaftor to improve channel activity for mutants with severe gating defect.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f4294bafcfa4e5f64db39991eddc0f8e