4.5 Article

ACVR1 p.Q207E causes classic fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva and is functionally distinct from the engineered constitutively active ACVR1 p.Q207D variant

Journal

HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS
Volume 23, Issue 20, Pages 5364-5377

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddu255

Keywords

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Funding

  1. 'The Center for Research in Fibrodysplasia Ossificans Progressiva' from the University of Pennsylvania
  2. German FOP e. V.
  3. International Fibrodysplasia Ossificans Progressiva Association
  4. Center for Research in FOP and Related Disorders
  5. Ian Cali Endowment for FOP Research
  6. Whitney Weldon Endowment for FOP Research
  7. Isaac & Rose Nassau Professorship of Orthopaedic Molecular Medicine
  8. Cali-Weldon Research Professorship in FOP
  9. Rita Allen Foundation
  10. Penn Center for Musculoskeletal Disorders [NIH P30-AR050950]
  11. National Institutes of Health [NIH R01-AR41916]
  12. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft through the Berlin-Brandenburg School for Regenerative Therapies [GSC 203]

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Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP) is a disabling genetic disorder of progressive heterotopic ossification (HO). Here, we report a patient with an ultra-rare point mutation [c.619C>G, p.Q207E] located in a codon adjacent to the most common FOP mutation [c.617G>A, p.R206H] of Activin A Receptor, type 1 (ACVR1) and that affects the same intracellular amino acid position in the GS activation domain as the engineered constitutively active (c.a.) variant p.Q207D. It was predicted that both mutations at residue 207 have similar functional effects by introducing a negative charge. Transgenic p.Q207D-c.a. mice have served as a model for FOP HO in several in vivostudies. However, we found that the engineered ACVR1(Q207D-c.a.) is significantly more active than the classic FOP mutation ACVR1(R206H) when overexpressed in chicken limbs and in differentiation assays of chondrogenesis, osteogenesis and myogenesis. Importantly, our studies reveal that the ACVR1(Q207E) resembles the classic FOP receptor in these assays, not the engineered ACVR1(Q207D-c.a). Notably, reporter gene assays revealed that both naturally occurring FOP receptors (ACVR1(R206H) and ACVR1(Q207E)) were activated by BMP7 and were sensitive to deletion of the ligand binding domain, whereas the engineered ACVR1(Q207D-c.a). exhibited ligand independent activity. We performed an in silico analysis and propose a structural model for p.Q207D-c.a. that irreversibly relocates the GS domain into an activating position, where it becomes ligand independent. We conclude that the engineered p.Q207D-c.a. mutation has severe limitations as a model for FOP, whereas the naturally occurring mutations p.R206H and p.Q207E facilitate receptor activation, albeit in a reversible manner.

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