1. Academic Validation
  2. A dominant STIM1 mutation causes Stormorken syndrome

A dominant STIM1 mutation causes Stormorken syndrome

  • Hum Mutat. 2014 May;35(5):556-64. doi: 10.1002/humu.22544.
Doriana Misceo 1 Asbjørn Holmgren William E Louch Pål A Holme Masahiro Mizobuchi Raul J Morales André Maues De Paula Asbjørg Stray-Pedersen Robert Lyle Bjørn Dalhus Geir Christensen Helge Stormorken Geir E Tjønnfjord Eirik Frengen
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Medical Genetics, University of Oslo and Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
Abstract

Stormorken syndrome is a rare autosomal-dominant disease with mild bleeding tendency, thrombocytopathy, thrombocytopenia, mild anemia, asplenia, tubular aggregate myopathy, miosis, headache, and ichthyosis. A heterozygous missense mutation in STIM1 exon 7 (c.910C>T; p.Arg304Trp) (NM_003156.3) was found to segregate with the disease in six Stormorken syndrome patients in four families. Upon sensing Ca(2+) depletion in the endoplasmic reticulum lumen, STIM1 undergoes a conformational change enabling it to interact with and open ORAI1, a Ca(2+) release-activated Ca(2+) channel located in the plasma membrane. The STIM1 mutation found in Stormorken syndrome patients is located in the coiled-coil 1 domain, which might play a role in keeping STIM1 inactive. In agreement with a possible gain-of-function mutation in STIM1, blood platelets from patients were in a preactivated state with high exposure of aminophospholipids on the outer surface of the plasma membrane. Resting Ca(2+) levels were elevated in platelets from the patients compared with controls, and store-operated Ca(2+) entry was markedly attenuated, further supporting constitutive activity of STIM1 and ORAI1. Thus, our data are compatible with a near-maximal activation of STIM1 in Stormorken syndrome patients. We conclude that the heterozygous mutation c.910C>T causes the complex phenotype that defines this syndrome.

Keywords

CRAC; SOCE; STIM1; Stormorken syndrome; whole-exome sequencing.

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