Sequence variation in PPP1R13L results in a novel form of cardio-cutaneous syndrome

PPP1R13L 序列变异导致一种新型心脏皮肤综合征

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作者:Tzipora C Falik-Zaccai, Yiftah Barsheshet, Hanna Mandel, Meital Segev, Avraham Lorber, Shachaf Gelberg, Limor Kalfon, Shani Ben Haroush, Adel Shalata, Liat Gelernter-Yaniv, Sarah Chaim, Dorith Raviv Shay, Morad Khayat, Michal Werbner, Inbar Levi, Yishay Shoval, Galit Tal, Stavit Shalev, Eli Reuveni,

Abstract

Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a life-threatening disorder whose genetic basis is heterogeneous and mostly unknown. Five Arab Christian infants, aged 4-30 months from four families, were diagnosed with DCM associated with mild skin, teeth, and hair abnormalities. All passed away before age 3. A homozygous sequence variation creating a premature stop codon at PPP1R13L encoding the iASPP protein was identified in three infants and in the mother of the other two. Patients' fibroblasts and PPP1R13L-knocked down human fibroblasts presented higher expression levels of pro-inflammatory cytokine genes in response to lipopolysaccharide, as well as Ppp1r13l-knocked down murine cardiomyocytes and hearts of Ppp1r13l-deficient mice. The hypersensitivity to lipopolysaccharide was NF-κB-dependent, and its inducible binding activity to promoters of pro-inflammatory cytokine genes was elevated in patients' fibroblasts. RNA sequencing of Ppp1r13l-knocked down murine cardiomyocytes and of hearts derived from different stages of DCM development in Ppp1r13l-deficient mice revealed the crucial role of iASPP in dampening cardiac inflammatory response. Our results determined PPP1R13L as the gene underlying a novel autosomal-recessive cardio-cutaneous syndrome in humans and strongly suggest that the fatal DCM during infancy is a consequence of failure to regulate transcriptional pathways necessary for tuning cardiac threshold response to common inflammatory stressors.

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