4.5 Article

The importance of E-cadherin binding partners to evaluate the pathogenicity of E-cadherin missense mutations associated to HDGC

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages 301-309

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ejhg.2012.159

Keywords

HDGC; E-cadherin; CDH1 mutations; E-cadherin trafficking; E-cadherin binding partners; diagnostic method

Funding

  1. Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia, Portugal [PTDC/SAU-OBD/104017/2008, PTDC/SAU-ONC/110294/2009, SFRH/BD/43763/2008]
  2. FCT
  3. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [PTDC/SAU-ONC/110294/2009, PTDC/SAU-OBD/104017/2008, SFRH/BD/43763/2008] Funding Source: FCT

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In hereditary diffuse gastric cancer (HDGC), CDH1 germline gene alterations are causative events in 30% of the cases. In 20% of HDGC families, CDH1 germline mutations are of the missense type and the mutation carriers constitute a problem in terms of genetic counseling and surveillance. To access the pathogenic relevance of missense mutations, we have previously developed an in vitro method to functionally characterize them. Pathogenic E-cadherin missense mutants fail to aggregate and become more invasive, in comparison with cells expressing the wild-type (WT) protein. Herein, our aim was to develop a complementary method to unravel the pathogenic significance of E-cadherin missense mutations. We used cells stably expressing WT E-cadherin and seven HDGC-associated mutations (five intracellular and two extracellular) and studied by proximity ligation assays (PLA) how these mutants bind to fundamental regulators of E-cadherin function and trafficking. We focused our attention on the interaction with: p120, beta-catenin, PIPKI gamma and Hakai. We showed that cytoplasmic E-cadherin mutations affect the interaction of one or more binding partners, compromising the E-cadherin stability at the plasma membrane and likely affecting the adhesion complex competence. In the present work, we demonstrated that the study of the interplay between E-cadherin and its binding partners, using PLA, is an easy, rapid, quantitative and highly reproducible technique that can be applied in routine labs to verify the pathogenicity of E-cadherin missense mutants for HDGC diagnosis, especially those located in the intracellular domain of the protein. European Journal of Human Genetics (2013) 21, 301-309; doi:10.1038/ejhg.2012.159; published online 1 August 2012

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