TY - JOUR
T1 - Lysosomal Storage and Albinism Due to Effects of a De Novo CLCN7 Variant on Lysosomal Acidification
AU - Undiagnosed Diseases Network
AU - Nicoli, Elena Raluca
AU - Weston, Mary R.
AU - Hackbarth, Mary
AU - Becerril, Alissa
AU - Larson, Austin
AU - Zein, Wadih M.
AU - Baker, Peter R.
AU - Burke, John Douglas
AU - Dorward, Heidi
AU - Davids, Mariska
AU - Huang, Yan
AU - Adams, David R.
AU - Zerfas, Patricia M.
AU - Chen, Dong
AU - Markello, Thomas C.
AU - Toro, Camilo
AU - Wood, Tim
AU - Elliott, Gene
AU - Vu, Mylinh
AU - Acosta, Maria T.
AU - Agrawal, Pankaj
AU - Alejandro, Mercedes E.
AU - Allard, Patrick
AU - Alvey, Justin
AU - Andrews, Ashley
AU - Ashley, Euan A.
AU - Azamian, Mahshid S.
AU - Bacino, Carlos A.
AU - Bademci, Guney
AU - Baker, Eva
AU - Balasubramanyam, Ashok
AU - Baldridge, Dustin
AU - Bale, Jim
AU - Barbouth, Deborah
AU - Batzli, Gabriel F.
AU - Bayrak-Toydemir, Pinar
AU - Beggs, Alan H.
AU - Bejerano, Gill
AU - Bellen, Hugo J.
AU - Bernstein, Jonathan A.
AU - Berry, Gerard T.
AU - Bican, Anna
AU - Bick, David P.
AU - Birch, Camille L.
AU - Cole, F. Sessions
AU - Pak, Stephen
AU - Schedl, Timothy
AU - Shin, Jimann
AU - Solnica-Krezel, Lilianna
AU - Wambach, Jennifer
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the probands, their families, and the treating physicians for their cooperation, encouragement, and interest. This work was supported by the Intramural Research Programs of the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke ; the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Undiagnosed Diseases Program, part of the Undiagnosed Diseases Network, was supported by the Common Fund, Office of the Director, NIH . St. Peter’s University Hospital is a designated regional center for general genetic and newborn screening services in New Jersey and is supported, in part, by Special Child Health and Early Intervention Services, New Jersey Department of Health . We thank Emyr Lloyd-Evans for his insightful comments on this manuscript and both the biochemical genetics laboratory at the Greenwood genetic center and Laura Pollard for their help with the measurement of lysosomal enzymes. The CD63 (H5C6), Lamp1 (H4A3), and Lamp2 (H4B4) antibodies developed by J.T. August and J.E.K. Hildreth (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine) were obtained from the Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, created by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) of the NIH and maintained at the University of Iowa, Department of Biology. We thank Tim Wood (Greenwood Genetics) for fibroblasts from proband 2 and Forbes Porter, NICHD, for the NPC25 fibroblast line; Cecilia Rivas and Karen Hazzard (NHGRI, NIH) for their assistance in mouse generation; and Calvin Johnson and Huey Cheung, NIH Center for Information Technology, for developing the software used for lysosomal pH quantification.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019
PY - 2019/6/6
Y1 - 2019/6/6
N2 - Optimal lysosome function requires maintenance of an acidic pH maintained by proton pumps in combination with a counterion transporter such as the Cl−/H+ exchanger, CLCN7 (ClC-7), encoded by CLCN7. The role of ClC-7 in maintaining lysosomal pH has been controversial. In this paper, we performed clinical and genetic evaluations of two children of different ethnicities. Both children had delayed myelination and development, organomegaly, and hypopigmentation, but neither had osteopetrosis. Whole-exome and -genome sequencing revealed a de novo c.2144A>G variant in CLCN7 in both affected children. This p.Tyr715Cys variant, located in the C-terminal domain of ClC-7, resulted in increased outward currents when it was heterologously expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Fibroblasts from probands displayed a lysosomal pH approximately 0.2 units lower than that of control cells, and treatment with chloroquine normalized the pH. Primary fibroblasts from both probands also exhibited markedly enlarged intracellular vacuoles; this finding was recapitulated by the overexpression of human p.Tyr715Cys CLCN7 in control fibroblasts, reflecting the dominant, gain-of-function nature of the variant. A mouse harboring the knock-in Clcn7 variant exhibited hypopigmentation, hepatomegaly resulting from abnormal storage, and enlarged vacuoles in cultured fibroblasts. Our results show that p.Tyr715Cys is a gain-of-function CLCN7 variant associated with developmental delay, organomegaly, and hypopigmentation resulting from lysosomal hyperacidity, abnormal storage, and enlarged intracellular vacuoles. Our data supports the hypothesis that the ClC-7 antiporter plays a critical role in maintaining lysosomal pH.
AB - Optimal lysosome function requires maintenance of an acidic pH maintained by proton pumps in combination with a counterion transporter such as the Cl−/H+ exchanger, CLCN7 (ClC-7), encoded by CLCN7. The role of ClC-7 in maintaining lysosomal pH has been controversial. In this paper, we performed clinical and genetic evaluations of two children of different ethnicities. Both children had delayed myelination and development, organomegaly, and hypopigmentation, but neither had osteopetrosis. Whole-exome and -genome sequencing revealed a de novo c.2144A>G variant in CLCN7 in both affected children. This p.Tyr715Cys variant, located in the C-terminal domain of ClC-7, resulted in increased outward currents when it was heterologously expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Fibroblasts from probands displayed a lysosomal pH approximately 0.2 units lower than that of control cells, and treatment with chloroquine normalized the pH. Primary fibroblasts from both probands also exhibited markedly enlarged intracellular vacuoles; this finding was recapitulated by the overexpression of human p.Tyr715Cys CLCN7 in control fibroblasts, reflecting the dominant, gain-of-function nature of the variant. A mouse harboring the knock-in Clcn7 variant exhibited hypopigmentation, hepatomegaly resulting from abnormal storage, and enlarged vacuoles in cultured fibroblasts. Our results show that p.Tyr715Cys is a gain-of-function CLCN7 variant associated with developmental delay, organomegaly, and hypopigmentation resulting from lysosomal hyperacidity, abnormal storage, and enlarged intracellular vacuoles. Our data supports the hypothesis that the ClC-7 antiporter plays a critical role in maintaining lysosomal pH.
KW - ClC-7 antiporter
KW - chloroquine
KW - cutaneous albinism
KW - lysosomal hyperacidity
KW - lysosomal membrane counterion
KW - lysosomal pH
KW - lysosomal storage disease
KW - oculocutaneous albinism
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85066447029&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.04.008
DO - 10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.04.008
M3 - Article
C2 - 31155284
AN - SCOPUS:85066447029
SN - 0002-9297
VL - 104
SP - 1127
EP - 1138
JO - American journal of human genetics
JF - American journal of human genetics
IS - 6
ER -