1. ABCC6 prevents ectopic mineralization seen in pseudoxanthoma elasticum by inducing cellular nucleotide release
- Author
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Piet Borst, Koen van de Wetering, Jon A. Otero, Sunny Sapthu, Marcel de Haas, Asli Kucukosmanoglu, Theo G. M. F. Gorgels, Robert S. Jansen, Arthur A.B. Bergen, Ilse E. M. Hegman, Neurosurgery, Human genetics, ANS - Amsterdam Neuroscience, Human Genetics, Other departments, and Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience (NIN)
- Subjects
DNA, Complementary ,ABCC6 ,Biology ,Mice ,Ectopic calcification ,Metabolic Diseases ,In vivo ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Metabolomics ,Nucleotide ,Pseudoxanthoma Elasticum ,DNA Primers ,Mice, Knockout ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Multidisciplinary ,HEK 293 cells ,Biological Sciences ,Pseudoxanthoma elasticum ,medicine.disease ,Molecular biology ,In vitro ,Rats ,Diphosphates ,HEK293 Cells ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Mutation ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,biology.protein ,Multidrug Resistance-Associated Proteins ,Nucleoside ,Dinucleoside Phosphates - Abstract
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by progressive ectopic mineralization of the skin, eyes, and arteries, for which no effective treatment exists. PXE is caused by inactivating mutations in the gene encoding ATP-binding cassette sub-family C member 6 (ABCC6), an ATP-dependent efflux transporter present mainly in the liver. Abcc6-/- mice have been instrumental in demonstrating that PXE is a metabolic disease caused by the absence of an unknown factor in the circulation, the presence of which depends on ABCC6 in the liver. Why absence of this factor results in PXE has remained a mystery. Here we report that medium from HEK293 cells overexpressing either human or rat ABCC6 potently inhibits mineralization in vitro, whereas medium from HEK293 control cells does not. Untargeted metabolomics revealed that cells expressing ABCC6 excrete large amounts of nucleoside triphosphates, even though ABCC6 itself does not transport nucleoside triphosphates. Extracellularly, ectonucleotidases hydrolyze the excreted nucleoside triphosphates to nucleoside monophosphates and inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi), a strong inhibitor of mineralization that plays a pivotal role in several mineralization disorders similar to PXE. The in vivo relevance of our data are demonstrated in Abcc6-/- mice, which had plasma PPi levels
- Published
- 2013