Abstract
Chloride-proton exchange by the lysosomal anion transporter ClC- 7/Ostm1 is of pivotal importance for the physiology of lysosomes and bone resorption. Mice lacking either ClC-7 or Ostm1 develop a lysosomal storage disease and mutations in either protein have been found to underlie osteopetrosis in mice and humans. Some human disease-causing CLCN7 mutations accelerate the usually slow voltage-dependent gating of ClC-7/Ostm1. However, it has remained unclear whether the fastened kinetics is indeed causative for the disease. Here we identified and characterized a new deleterious ClC- 7 mutation in Belgian Blue cattle with a severe symptomatology including perinatal lethality and in most cases gingival hamartomas. By autozygosity mapping and genome-wide sequencing we found a handful of candidate variants, including a cluster of three private SNPs causing the substitution of a conserved tyrosine in the CBS2 domain of ClC-7 by glutamine. The case for ClC-7 was strengthened by subsequent examination of affected calves that revealed severe osteopetrosis. The Y750Q mutation largely preserved the lysosomal localization and assembly of ClC-7/Ostm1, but drastically accelerated its activation by membrane depolarization. These data provide first evidence that accelerated ClC-7/Ostm1 gating per se is deleterious, highlighting a physiological importance of the slow voltage-activation of ClC-7/Ostm1 in lysosomal function and bone resorption. © 2014. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd.
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Sartelet, A., Stauber, T., Coppieters, W., Ludwig, C. F., Fasquelle, C., Druet, T., … Charlier, C. (2014). A missense mutation accelerating the gating of the lysosomal Cl -/H+-exchanger ClC-7/Ostm1 causes osteopetrosis with gingival hamartomas in cattle. DMM Disease Models and Mechanisms, 7(1), 119–128. https://doi.org/10.1242/dmm.012500
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