4.6 Article

A missense T(Brachyury) mutation contributes to vertebral malformations

Journal

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH
Volume 23, Issue 10, Pages 1576-1583

Publisher

AMER SOC BONE & MINERAL RES
DOI: 10.1359/JBMR.080503

Keywords

multi-hit kinetics; patterning gene; T(Brachyury); vertebral malformation; epistasis

Funding

  1. Scoliosis Research Society
  2. Marshfield Clinic Research Foundation
  3. Beatrice and Samuel A. Seaver Foundation

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No major susceptibility genes for sporadically occurring congenital vertebral malformations (CVM) in humans have been identified to date. Body pattering genes whose Mutants cause axial skeletal anomalies in truce are candidates for human CVM susceptibility. T (also known as Brachyury) and TBX6 are critical genes needed to establish mesodermal Identity. We hypothesized that Mutations in T and/or TBX6 contribute to the pathogenesis Of human CVMs. The complete T and TBX6 coding regions, splice junctions, and proximal 500 bp of the promoters were sequenced in 50 phenotyped patients with CVM. Three unrelated patients with sacral agenesis, Klippel-Fell syndrome. and multiple cervical and thoracic vertebral malformations were heterozygous for a c.1013C>T substitution, resulting in a predicted Ala33SVal missense alteration in exon 8. A clinically unaffected parent of each patient also harbored the substitution. but the variant did not occur in an ethnically diverse, 443-person reference population. The c.1013C>T variant is significantly associated with CVM (p < 0.001). Alanine 338 shows moderate conservation across species, and valine at this position has not been reported in any species. A fourth patient harbored a c.908-8C>T variant in intron 7. This previously unreported variant was tested in 347 normal control subjects, and 11 heterozygotes and 2 T/T individuals were found. No TBX6 variants were identified. We infer that the c.1013C>T Substitution is pathogenic and represents the first report of an association between a missense mutation in the T gene and the Occurrence of sporadic CVMs in humans. It is uncertain whether the splice junction variant increases CVM risk. TBX6 mutations do not seem to be associated with CVM. We hypothesize that epistatic interactions between T and other developmental genes and the environment modulate the phenotypic consequences of T variants.

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