A Rab33b missense mouse model for Smith-McCort dysplasia shows bone resorption defects and altered protein glycosylation.

Frontiers in genetics(2023)

引用 0|浏览6
暂无评分
摘要
Smith McCort (SMC) dysplasia is a rare, autosomal recessive, osteochondrodysplasia that can be caused by pathogenic variants in either or genes. These genes codes for proteins that are located at the Golgi apparatus and have a role in intracellular vesicle trafficking. We generated mice that carry a disease-causing variant, c.136A>C (p.Lys46Gln), which is identical to that of members from a consanguineous family diagnosed with SMC. In male mice at 4 months of age, the variant caused a mild increase in trabecular bone thickness in the spine and femur and in femoral mid-shaft cortical thickness with a concomitant reduction of the femoral medullary area, suggesting a bone resorption defect. In spite of the increase in trabecular and cortical thickness, bone histomorphometry showed a 4-fold increase in osteoclast parameters in homozygous mice suggesting a putative impairment in osteoclast function, while dynamic parameters of bone formation were similar in mutant control mice. Femur biomechanical tests showed an increased in yield load and a progressive elevation, from WT to heterozygote to homozygous mutants, of bone intrinsic properties. These findings suggest an overall impact on bone material properties which may be caused by disturbed protein glycosylation in cells contributing to skeletal formation, supported by the altered and variable pattern of lectin staining in murine and human tissue cultured cells and in liver and bone murine tissues. The mouse model only reproduced some of the features of the human disease and was sex-specific, manifesting in male but not female mice. Our data reveal a potential novel role of RAB33B in osteoclast function and protein glycosylation and their dysregulation in SMC and lay the foundation for future studies.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Smith-McCort dysplasia,RAB33B,GTPases,bone,Golgi,glycosylation
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要