A new mechanism of dominance in hypophosphatasia: the mutated protein can disturb the cell localization of the wild-type protein
- PMID: 18340466
- DOI: 10.1007/s00439-008-0480-1
A new mechanism of dominance in hypophosphatasia: the mutated protein can disturb the cell localization of the wild-type protein
Abstract
The dominant negative effect of mutations is rare in metabolic diseases and its mechanism has not been studied much. Hypophosphatasia, a bone inherited metabolic disorder, is a good model because the disease can be dominantly transmitted. The gene product activity depends on a homodimeric configuration and many mutations have been reported in the ALPL gene responsible for the disease. Using CFP/YFP-tagged-TNSALP plasmids, transfections in COS cells and confocal fluorescence analyses, we studied the point mutation G232V (c.746G>T). We showed that the G232V protein sequestrates some of the wild-type protein into the cells and prevents it from reaching the membrane where it plays its physiological role.
References
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Miscellaneous
