Mutations in<i>POMGNT1</i>cause non-syndromic retinitis pigmentosa

Mingchu Xu(Human Genome Sciences (United States)), Takeyuki Yamada(Tokyo Metropolitan Geriatric Hospital), Zixi Sun(Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College), Aiden Eblimit(Human Genome Sciences (United States)), Irma López(McGill University Health Centre), Feng Wang(Human Genome Sciences (United States)), Hiroshi Manya(Tokyo Metropolitan Geriatric Hospital), Shan Xu(Human Genome Sciences (United States)), Li Zhao(Institute of Molecular Biology and Biophysics), Yumei Li(Human Genome Sciences (United States)), Adva Kimchi(Hadassah Medical Center), Dror Sharon(Hadassah Medical Center), Ruifang Sui(Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College), Tamao Endo(Tokyo Metropolitan Geriatric Hospital), Robert K. Koenekoop(McGill University Health Centre), Rui Chen(Baylor College of Medicine)
Human Molecular Genetics
January 28, 2016
Cited by 48Open Access
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Abstract

A growing number of human diseases have been linked to defects in protein glycosylation that affects a wide range of organs. Among them, O-mannosylation is an unusual type of protein glycosylation that is largely restricted to the muscular and nerve system. Consistently, mutations in genes involved in the O-mannosylation pathway result in infantile-onset, severe developmental defects involving skeleton muscle, brain and eye, such as the muscle-eye-brain disease (MIM no. 253280). However, the functional importance of O-mannosylation in these tissues at later stages remains largely unknown. In our study, we have identified recessive mutations in POMGNT1, which encodes an essential component in O-mannosylation pathway, in three unrelated families with autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa (RP), but without extraocular involvement. Enzymatic assay of these mutant alleles demonstrate that they greatly reduce the POMGNT1 enzymatic activity and are likely to be hypomorphic. Immunohistochemistry shows that POMGNT1 is specifically expressed in photoreceptor basal body. Taken together, our work identifies a novel disease-causing gene for RP and indicates that proper protein O-mannosylation is not only essential for early organ development, but also important for maintaining survival and function of the highly specialized retinal cells at later stages.


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