Aldrian, D;
Vogel, GF;
Frey, TK;
Ayyıldız Civan, H;
Aksu, AÜ;
Avitzur, Y;
Ramos Boluda, E;
Çakır, M;
Demir, AM;
Deppisch, C;
et al.
Aldrian, D; Vogel, GF; Frey, TK; Ayyıldız Civan, H; Aksu, AÜ; Avitzur, Y; Ramos Boluda, E; Çakır, M; Demir, AM; Deppisch, C; Duba, H-C; Düker, G; Gerner, P; Hertecant, J; Hornová, J; Kathemann, S; Koeglmeier, J; Koutroumpa, A; Lanzersdorfer, R; Lev-Tzion, R; Lima, R; Mansour, S; Meissl, M; Melek, J; Miqdady, M; Montoya, JH; Posovszky, C; Rachman, Y; Siahanidou, T; Tabbers, M; Uhlig, HH; Ünal, S; Wirth, S; Ruemmele, FM; Hess, MW; Huber, LA; Müller, T; Sturm, E; Janecke, AR
(2021)
Congenital Diarrhea and Cholestatic Liver Disease: Phenotypic Spectrum Associated with MYO5B Mutations.
J Clin Med, 10 (3).
p. 481.
ISSN 2077-0383
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10030481
SGUL Authors: Mansour, Sahar
Abstract
Myosin Vb (MYO5B) is a motor protein that facilitates protein trafficking and recycling in polarized cells by RAB11- and RAB8-dependent mechanisms. Biallelic MYO5B mutations are identified in the majority of patients with microvillus inclusion disease (MVID). MVID is an intractable diarrhea of infantile onset with characteristic histopathologic findings that requires life-long parenteral nutrition or intestinal transplantation. A large number of such patients eventually develop cholestatic liver disease. Bi-allelic MYO5B mutations are also identified in a subset of patients with predominant early-onset cholestatic liver disease. We present here the compilation of 114 patients with disease-causing MYO5B genotypes, including 44 novel patients as well as 35 novel MYO5B mutations, and an analysis of MYO5B mutations with regard to functional consequences. Our data support the concept that (1) a complete lack of MYO5B protein or early MYO5B truncation causes predominant intestinal disease (MYO5B-MVID), (2) the expression of full-length mutant MYO5B proteins with residual function causes predominant cholestatic liver disease (MYO5B-PFIC), and (3) the expression of mutant MYO5B proteins without residual function causes both intestinal and hepatic disease (MYO5B-MIXED). Genotype-phenotype data are deposited in the existing open MYO5B database in order to improve disease diagnosis, prognosis, and genetic counseling.
Item Type: |
Article
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Additional Information: |
© 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). |
Keywords: |
MYO5B, PFIC, congenital diarrheal diseases, enteropathy, genotype–phenotype correlation, lack of protein, microvillus inclusion disease, myosin Vb, progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis, tail domain, congenital diarrheal diseases, enteropathy, microvillus inclusion disease, MYO5B, myosin Vb, progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis, PFIC, genotype–, phenotype correlation, lack of protein, tail domain |
SGUL Research Institute / Research Centre: |
Academic Structure > Molecular and Clinical Sciences Research Institute (MCS) |
Journal or Publication Title: |
J Clin Med |
ISSN: |
2077-0383 |
Language: |
eng |
Dates: |
Date | Event |
---|
28 January 2021 | Published | 21 January 2021 | Accepted |
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Publisher License: |
Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0 |
Projects: |
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PubMed ID: |
33525641 |
Web of Science ID: |
WOS:000615361100001 |
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Go to PubMed abstract |
URI: |
https://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/id/eprint/113002 |
Publisher's version: |
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10030481 |
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