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Infancy-onset diabetes caused by de-regulated AMPylation of the human endoplasmic reticulum chaperone BiP

Authors :
Perera, Luke A
Hattersley, Andrew T
Harding, Heather P
Wakeling, Matthew N
Flanagan, Sarah E
Mohsina, Ibrahim
Raza, Jamal
Gardham, Alice
Ron, David
De Franco, Elisa
Perera, Luke A [0000-0002-0032-1176]
Hattersley, Andrew T [0000-0001-5620-473X]
Harding, Heather P [0000-0002-7359-7974]
Ron, David [0000-0002-3014-5636]
De Franco, Elisa [0000-0002-1437-7891]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, 2022.

Abstract

Dysfunction of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in insulin-producing beta cells results in cell loss and diabetes mellitus. Here we report on five individuals from three different consanguineous families with infancy-onset diabetes mellitus and severe neurodevelopmental delay caused by a homozygous p.(Arg371Ser) mutation in FICD. The FICD gene encodes a bifunctional Fic domain-containing enzyme that regulates the ER Hsp70 chaperone, BiP, via catalysis of two antagonistic reactions: inhibitory AMPylation and stimulatory deAMPylation of BiP. Arg371 is a conserved residue in the Fic domain active site. The FICDR371S mutation partially compromises BiP AMPylation in vitro but eliminates all detectable deAMPylation activity. Overexpression of FICDR371S or knock-in of the mutation at the FICD locus of stressed CHO cells results in inappropriately elevated levels of AMPylated BiP and compromised secretion. These findings, guided by human genetics, highlight the destructive consequences of de-regulated BiP AMPylation and raise the prospect of tuning FICD's antagonistic activities towards therapeutic ends.<br />Supported by a Wellcome Trust Principal Research Fellowship to D.R. (Wellcome 200848/Z/16/Z). A Diabetes UK RD Lawrence fellowship to E.D.F. (Grant number 19_0005971), and a Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellowship to S.E.F. (105636/Z/14/Z). M.N.W. is in receipt of an Independent Fellowship from the Exeter Diabetes Centre of Excellence funded by Research England’s Expanding Excellence in England (E3) fund

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7b838d518cb2350f155d423a6d4fcedd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.91685