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Deficiency in the endocytic adaptor protein PHETA1/2 impairs renal and craniofacial development

Authors: 
Ates KM, Wang T, Moreland T, Veeranan-Karmegam R, Anand P, Wenzel W, Kim H-G, Wolfe LA, Stephen JA, Adams DR, Markello T, Tifft CJ, Gahl WA, Gonsalvez GB, May Christine Malicdan, Flanagan-Steet H, Pan Y
Citation: 
bioRxiv. 2019;[preprint] doi:10.1101/727578
Abstract: 
A critical barrier in the treatment of endosomal and lysosomal diseases is the lack of understanding of the in vivo functions of the putative causative genes. We addressed this by investigating a key pair of endocytic adaptor proteins, PH domain containing endocytic trafficking adaptor 1 and 2 (PHETA1/2, also known as FAM109A/B, Ses1/2, IPIP27A/B), which interact with the protein product of OCRL, the causative gene for Lowe syndrome. Here we conducted the first study of PHETA1/2 in vivo, utilizing the zebrafish system. We found that impairment of both zebrafish orthologs, pheta1 and pheta2, disrupted endocytosis and ciliogenesis. In addition, pheta1/2 mutant animals exhibited reduced jaw size and delayed chondrocyte maturation, indicating a role in craniofacial development. Deficiency of pheta1/2 resulted in dysregulation of cathepsin K, which led to an increased abundance of type II collagen in craniofacial cartilages. The abnormal renal and craniofacial phenotypes in the pheta1/2 mutant animals were consistent with the clinical presentations of a patient with a de novo arginine (R) to cysteine (C) variant (R6C) of PHETA1. Expressing the patient-specific variant in zebrafish exacerbated craniofacial deficits, suggesting that the R6C allele acts in a dominant-negative manner. Together, these results provide insights into the in vivo roles of PHETA1/2 and suggest that the R6C variant is contributory to the pathogenesis of disease in the patient.
Epub: 
Not Epub
Organism or Cell Type: 
zebrafish
Delivery Method: 
microinjection