1. Academic Validation
  2. Mutation of the bone morphogenetic protein GDF3 causes ocular and skeletal anomalies

Mutation of the bone morphogenetic protein GDF3 causes ocular and skeletal anomalies

  • Hum Mol Genet. 2010 Jan 15;19(2):287-98. doi: 10.1093/hmg/ddp496.
Ming Ye 1 Karyn M Berry-Wynne Mika Asai-Coakwell Periasamy Sundaresan Tim Footz Curtis R French Marc Abitbol Valerie C Fleisch Nathan Corbett W Ted Allison Garry Drummond Michael A Walter T Michael Underhill Andrew J Waskiewicz Ordan J Lehmann
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Ophthalmology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
Abstract

Ocular mal-development results in heterogeneous and frequently visually disabling phenotypes that include coloboma and microphthalmia. Due to the contribution of bone morphogenetic proteins to such processes, the function of the paralogue Growth Differentiation Factor 3 was investigated. Multiple mis-sense variants were identified in patients with ocular and/or skeletal (Klippel-Feil) anomalies including one individual with heterozygous alterations in GDF3 and GDF6. These variants were characterized, individually and in combination, through integrated biochemical and zebrafish model organism analyses, demonstrating appreciable effects with western blot analyses, luciferase based reporter assays and antisense morpholino inhibition. Notably, inhibition of the zebrafish co-orthologue of GDF3 accurately recapitulates patient phenotypes. By demonstrating the pleiotropic effects of GDF3 mutation, these results extend the contribution of perturbed BMP signaling to human disease and potentially implicate multi-allelic inheritance of BMP variants in developmental disorders.

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