A review of gigaxonin mutations in giant axonal neuropathy (GAN) and cancer

被引:0
|
作者
James J. Kang
Isabelle Y. Liu
Marilene B. Wang
Eri S. Srivatsan
机构
[1] VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System/David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA,Department of Surgery
[2] David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California Los Angeles,Department of Head and Neck Surgery
[3] David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California Los Angeles,Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center
来源
Human Genetics | 2016年 / 135卷
关键词
Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator; iPSC; Silent Mutation; KM12 Cell; Giant Axonal Neuropathy;
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学科分类号
摘要
Gigaxonin, the product of GAN gene localized to chromosome 16, is associated with the early onset neuronal degeneration disease giant axonal neuropathy (GAN). Gigaxonin is an E3 ubiquitin ligase adaptor protein involved in intermediate filament processing in neural cells, and vimentin filaments in fibroblasts. Mutations of the gene cause pre-neural filaments to accumulate and form giant axons resulting in the inhibition of neural cell signaling. Analysis of the catalog of somatic mutations in cancer, driver DB and IDGC data portal databases containing 21,000 tumor genomic sequences has identified GAN patient mutations in cancer cell lines and primary tumors. The database search has also shown the presence of identical missense and nonsense gigaxonin mutations in GAN and colon cancer. These mutations frequently occur in the domains associated with protein homodimerization and substrate interaction such as Broad-Complex, Tramtrack and Bric a brac (BTB), BTB associated C-terminal KELCH (BACK), and KELCH repeats. Analysis of the International HapMap Project database containing 1200 normal genomic sequences has identified a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), rs2608555, in exon 8 of the gigaxonin sequence. While this SNP is present in >40 % of Caucasian population, it is present in less than 10 % of Japanese and Chinese populations. Although the role of gigaxonin polymorphism is not yet known, CFTR and MDR1 gene studies have shown that silent mutations play a role in the instability and aberrant splicing and folding of mRNAs. We believe that molecular and functional investigation of gigaxonin mutations including the exon 8 polymorphism could lead to an improved understanding of the relationship between GAN and cancer.
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页码:675 / 684
页数:9
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