15 research outputs found
Genome mining yields putative disease-associated ROMK variants with distinct defects.
Bartter syndrome is a group of rare genetic disorders that compromise kidney function by impairing electrolyte reabsorption. Left untreated, the resulting hyponatremia, hypokalemia, and dehydration can be fatal, and there is currently no cure. Bartter syndrome type II specifically arises from mutations in KCNJ1, which encodes the renal outer medullary potassium channel, ROMK. Over 40 Bartter syndrome-associated mutations in KCNJ1 have been identified, yet their molecular defects are mostly uncharacterized. Nevertheless, a subset of disease-linked mutations compromise ROMK folding in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), which in turn results in premature degradation via the ER associated degradation (ERAD) pathway. To identify uncharacterized human variants that might similarly lead to premature degradation and thus disease, we mined three genomic databases. First, phenotypic data in the UK Biobank were analyzed using a recently developed computational platform to identify individuals carrying KCNJ1 variants with clinical features consistent with Bartter syndrome type II. In parallel, we examined genomic data in both the NIH TOPMed and ClinVar databases with the aid of Rhapsody, a verified computational algorithm that predicts mutation pathogenicity and disease severity. Subsequent phenotypic studies using a yeast screen to assess ROMK function-and analyses of ROMK biogenesis in yeast and human cells-identified four previously uncharacterized mutations. Among these, one mutation uncovered from the two parallel approaches (G228E) destabilized ROMK and targeted it for ERAD, resulting in reduced cell surface expression. Another mutation (T300R) was ERAD-resistant, but defects in channel activity were apparent based on two-electrode voltage clamp measurements in X. laevis oocytes. Together, our results outline a new computational and experimental pipeline that can be applied to identify disease-associated alleles linked to a range of other potassium channels, and further our understanding of the ROMK structure-function relationship that may aid future therapeutic strategies to advance precision medicine
Novel Determinants of Epithelial Sodium Channel Gating within Extracellular Thumb Domains*
Activity of the epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC) is modulated by
Na+ self-inhibition, an allosteric down-regulation of channel open
probability by extracellular Na+. We searched for determinants of
Na+ self-inhibition by analyzing changes in this inhibitory
response resulting from specific mutations within the extracellular domains of
mouse ENaC subunits. Mutations at γMet438 altered the
Na+ self-inhibition response in a substitution-specific manner.
Fourteen substitutions (Ala, Arg, Asp, Cys, Gln, Glu, His, Ile, Phe, Pro, Ser,
Thr, Tyr, and Val) significantly suppressed Na+ self-inhibition,
whereas three mutations (Asn, Gly, and Leu) moderately enhanced the
inhibition. Met to Lys mutation did not alter Na+ self-inhibition.
Mutations at the homologous site in the α subunit (G481A, G481C, and
G481M) dramatically increased the magnitude and speed of Na+
self-inhibition. Mutations at the homologous βAla422 resulted
in minimal or no change in Na+ self-inhibition. Low, high, and
intermediate open probabilities were observed in oocytes expressing
αG481Mβγ, αβγM438V, and
αG481M/βγM438V, respectively. This pair of residues map to
theα5 helix in the extracellular thumb domain in the chicken acid
sensing ion channel 1 structure. Both residues likely reside near the channel
surface because both αG481Cβγ and αβγM438C
channels were inhibited by an externally applied and membrane-impermeant
sulfhydryl reagent. Our results demonstrate that αGly481 and
γMet438 are functional determinants of Na+
self-inhibition and of ENaC gating and suggest that the thumb domain
contributes to the channel gating machinery