Identification Of Cant1 Mutations In Desbuquois Dysplasia
Tarih
2009Yazar
Huber, Celine
Oules, Benedicte
Bertoli, Marta
Chami, Mounia
Fradin, Melanie
Alanay, Yasemin
Al-Gazali, Lihadh I.
Ausems, Margreet G. E. M.
Bitoun, Pierre
Cavalcanti, Denise P.
Krebs, Alexander
Le Merrer, Martine
Mortier, Geert
Shafeghati, Yousef
Superti-Furga, Andrea
Robertson, Stephen P.
Le Goff, Carine
Muda, Andrea Onetti
Paterlini-Brechot, Patrizia
Munnich, Arnold
Cormier-Daire, Valerie
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Desbuquois dysplasia is a severe condition characterized by short stature, joint laxity, scoliosis, and advanced carpal ossification with a delta phalanx. Studying nine Desbuquois families, we identified seven distinct mutations in the Calcium-Activated Nucleotidase 1 gene (CANT1), which encodes a soluble UDP-preferring nucleotidase belonging to the apyrase family. Among the seven mutations, four were nonsense mutations (Del 5' UTR and exon 1, p.P24SRfsX3, p.S303AfsX20, and p.W125X), and three were missense mutations (p.R300C, p.R300H, and p.P299L) responsible for the change of conserved amino acids located in the seventh nucleotidase conserved region (NRC). The arginine substitution at position 300 was identified in five out of nine families. The specific function of CANT1 is as yet unknown, but its substrates are involved in several major signaling functions, including Ca2+ release, through activation of pyrimidinergic signaling. Importantly, using RT-PCR analysis, we observed a specific expression in chondrocytes. We also found electron-dense material within distended rough endoplasmic reticulum in the fibroblasts of Desbuquois patients. Our findings demonstrate the specific involvement of a nucleotidase in the endochondral ossification process.