4.8 Article

Hypomorphic PCNA mutation underlies a human DNA repair disorder

期刊

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
卷 124, 期 7, 页码 3137-3146

出版社

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI74593

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资金

  1. MRC Clinical Research Training fellowship [G1001931]
  2. MRC [G1002279]
  3. MRC centenary fund award [G0900205]
  4. Newlife Foundation for disabled children
  5. Cancer Research UK career development fellowship [C24125/A8307]
  6. Wellcome Trust Core Award [090532/Z/09/Z]
  7. MRC [G1001931, MC_PC_U127580972, G1002279, MR/L006812/1, MR/J011673/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  8. Cancer Research UK [14346] Funding Source: researchfish
  9. Medical Research Council [G1002279, MR/J011673/1, MR/L006812/1, MC_PC_U127580972, G1001931] Funding Source: researchfish

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Numerous human disorders, including Cockayne syndrome, UV-sensitive syndrome, xeroderrna pigmentosum, and trichothiodystrophy, result from the mutation of genes encoding molecules important for nucleotide excision repair. Here, we describe a syndrome in which the cardinal clinical features include short stature, hearing loss, premature aging, telangiectasia, neurodegeneration, and photosensitivity, resulting from a homozygous missense (p.Ser228Ile) sequence alteration of the proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). PCNA is a highly conserved sliding clamp protein essential for DNA replication and repair. Due to this fundamental role, mutations in PCNA that profoundly impair protein function would be incompatible with life. Interestingly, while the p.Ser228Ile alteration appeared to have no effect on protein levels or DNA replication, patient cells exhibited marked abnormalities in response to UV irradiation, displaying substantial reductions in both UV survival and RNA synthesis recovery. The p.Ser228Ile change also profoundly altered PCNA's interaction with Flap endonudease 1 and DNA Ligase 1, DNA metabolism enzymes. Together, our findings detail a mutation of PCNA in humans associated with a neurodegenerative phenotype, displaying clinical and molecular features common to other DNA repair disorders, which we showed to be attributable to a hypomorphic amino acid alteration.

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