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Functional evaluation of paraplegin mutations by a yeast complementation assay
Author(s) -
Bonn Florian,
Pantakani Krishna,
Shoukier Moneef,
Langer Thomas,
Mannan Ashraf U.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
human mutation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 162
eISSN - 1098-1004
pISSN - 1059-7794
DOI - 10.1002/humu.21226
Subject(s) - biology , complementation , genetics , gene , protein fragment complementation assay , mutation , microbiology and biotechnology , protease , hereditary spastic paraplegia , phenotype , biochemistry , enzyme
An autosomal recessive form of hereditary spastic paraplegia (AR‐HSP) is primarily caused by mutations in the SPG7 gene, which codes for paraplegin, a subunit of the hetero‐oligomeric m ‐AAA protease in mitochondria. In the current study, sequencing of the SPG7 gene in the genomic DNA of 25 unrelated HSP individuals/families led to the identification of two HSP patients with compound heterozygous mutations (p.G349S/p.W583C and p.A510V/p.N739KfsX741) in the coding sequence of the SPG7 gene. We used a yeast complementation assay to evaluate the functional consequence of novel SPG7 sequence variants detected in the HSP patients. We assessed the proteolytic activity of hetero‐oligomeric m ‐AAA proteases composed of paraplegin variant(s) and proteolytically inactive forms of AFG3L2 (AFG3L2 E575Q or AFG3L2 K354A ) upon expression in m ‐AAA protease‐deficient yeast cells. We demonstrate that the newly identified paraplegin variants perturb the proteolytic function of hetero‐oligomeric m ‐AAA protease. Moreover, commonly occurring silent polymorphisms such as p.T503A and p.R688Q could be distinguished from mutations (p.G349S, p.W583C, p.A510V, and p.N739KfsX741) in our HSP cohort. The yeast complementation assay thus can serve as a reliable system to distinguish a pathogenic mutation from a silent polymorphism for any novel SPG7 sequence variant, which will facilitate the interpretation of genetic data for SPG7 . Hum Mutat 31:1–5, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.