首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


FAM111A Mutations Result in Hypoparathyroidism and Impaired Skeletal Development
Authors:Sheila Unger  Maria?W Górna  Antony Le?Béchec  Sonia Do?Vale-Pereira  Maria?Francesca Bedeschi  Stefan Geiberger  Giedre Grigelioniene  Eva Horemuzova  Faustina Lalatta  Ekkehart Lausch  Cinzia Magnani  Sheela Nampoothiri  Gen Nishimura  Duccio Petrella  Francisca Rojas-Ringeling  Akari Utsunomiya  Bernhard Zabel  Sylvain Pradervand  Keith Harshman  Belinda Campos-Xavier  Luisa Bonafé  Giulio Superti-Furga  Brian Stevenson  Andrea Superti-Furga
Abstract:Kenny-Caffey syndrome (KCS) and the similar but more severe osteocraniostenosis (OCS) are genetic conditions characterized by impaired skeletal development with small and dense bones, short stature, and primary hypoparathyroidism with hypocalcemia. We studied five individuals with KCS and five with OCS and found that all of them had heterozygous mutations in FAM111A. One mutation was identified in four unrelated individuals with KCS, and another one was identified in two unrelated individuals with OCS; all occurred de novo. Thus, OCS and KCS are allelic disorders of different severity. FAM111A codes for a 611 amino acid protein with homology to trypsin-like peptidases. Although FAM111A has been found to bind to the large T-antigen of SV40 and restrict viral replication, its native function is unknown. Molecular modeling of FAM111A shows that residues affected by KCS and OCS mutations do not map close to the active site but are clustered on a segment of the protein and are at, or close to, its outer surface, suggesting that the pathogenesis involves the interaction with as yet unidentified partner proteins rather than impaired catalysis. FAM111A appears to be crucial to a pathway that governs parathyroid hormone production, calcium homeostasis, and skeletal development and growth.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号