[From gene to disease; hypophosphataemic rickets and the PHEX gene]
- PMID: 16841587
[From gene to disease; hypophosphataemic rickets and the PHEX gene]
Abstract
X-linked hypophosphataemic rickets is associated with mutations in the PHEX gene on the short arm of the X chromosome, encoding a membrane-bound endoprotease which is predominantly expressed in osteoblasts. Defective PHEX function leaves phosphaturic peptides such as FGF23 uncleaved, enabling these peptides, known as phosphatonins, to fully exert their phosphaturic potential in the proximal tubule of the kidney. An autosomally inherited form of hypophosphataemic rickets is caused by mutations in the proteolytic processing site of FGF23 itself, while in tumour-induced osteomalacia overproduction of FGF23 and possibly other phosphatonins causes the processing capacity to be exceeded, resulting in phosphaturic hypophosphataemia and osteomalacia.
Comment in
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[From gene to disease; hypophosphataemic rickets and the PHEX gene].Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd. 2006 Sep 16;150(37):2058-9; author reply 2059. Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd. 2006. PMID: 17061325 Dutch. No abstract available.