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Mutations in TRPV4 cause an inherited arthropathy of hands and feet

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posted on 2024-11-01, 10:48 authored by Shireen R Lamande, Yuan Yuan, Irma Gresshoff, L Rowley, Daniele Belluoccio, Kumara Kaluarachchi, Christopher Little, Elke Botzenhart, Klaus Zerres, David Amor, William Cole, Ravi Savarirayan, Peter McIntyre, John Bateman
Familial digital arthropathy-brachydactyly (FDAB) is a dominantly inherited condition that is characterized by aggressive osteoarthropathy of the fingers and toes and consequent shortening of the middle and distal phalanges. Here we show in three unrelated families that FDAB is caused by mutations encoding p.Gly270Val, p.Arg271Pro and p.Phe273Leu substitutions in the intracellular ankyrin-repeat domain of the cation channel TRPV4. Functional testing of mutant TRPV4 in HEK-293 cells showed that the mutant proteins have poor cell-surface localization. Calcium influx in response to the synthetic TRPV4 agonists GSK1016790A and 4 ±PDD was significantly reduced, and mutant channels did not respond to hypotonic stress. Others have shown that gain-of-function TRPV4 mutations cause skeletal dysplasias and peripheral neuropathies. Our data indicate that TRPV4 mutations that reduce channel activity cause a third phenotype, inherited osteoarthropathy, and show the importance of TRPV4 activity in articular cartilage homeostasis. Our data raise the possibility that TRPV4 may also have a role in age-or injury-related osteoarthritis

History

Journal

Nature Genetics

Volume

43

Issue

11

Start page

1142

End page

1146

Total pages

5

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2011 Nature America, Inc. All rights reserved

Former Identifier

2006034276

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2013-06-11

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