Title: Achondroplasia: Dwarfism
1Achondroplasia Dwarfism
2Clinical Features
- Achondroplasia literally means without cartilage
formation. - Presents clinically as a long narrow trunk with
short extremities, large head with frontal
bossing, hypoplasia of the midface, and trident
configuration of the hands. - An autosomal dominant disorder a majority of
cases are sporadic, the result of a de novo
mutation. - A de novo mutation is a new mutation that occurs
in a germ cell and is then passed on to an
offspring.
3FGFR3 Gene
- The gene affected is the Fibroblast Growth Factor
Receptor 3 gene, of FGFR3. - FGFR3 is located on chromosome 4, 4p16.3
4Mutation
- There is a G to A transition at nucleotide 1138
of the coding sequence resulting in a gly380 to
arg substitution. - Glycine is a basic side chain with its positive
charge stabilized by resonance. - Arginie is a nonpolar side chain consisting of a
single hydrogen atom. - GGG changes to AGG in the majority of the cases
of achondroplasia.
5Protein Function
- These proteins play a role in several important
cellular processes, including regulation of cell
growth and division, determination of cell type,
formation of blood vessels, wound healing, and
embryo development. - FGFR3 is a transmembrane protein.
- The FGFR3 protein is involved in the development
and maintenance of bone and brain tissue.
Researchers believe that this receptor regulates
bone growth by limiting the formation of bone
from cartilage in the long bones.
6Conserved Domains
Most of the sections of the conserved domains are
tyrosine kinases, which are enzymes that can
transfer a phosphate group from ATP to a tyrosine
residue in a protein. This is important because
FGFR3 is a transmembrane protein that can
interact outside the cell to create a cascade of
events inside. The remainder of the conserved
domains are immunoglobulin chains.
73D Representation
This is an FGFR1 molecule, the alpha chain is
white and the beta chain is blue. It has similar
function but different structure than FGFR3. At
the 380 position it has a glutamine, which would
change to asparganine with the point mutation,
but this is not what causes achondroplasia.
8Aberrant Function
- The glycine to arginine switch in the protein
structure can create, obviously, large problems. - Since the glycine side chain is so much smaller
and without a charge, the binding sites and
structure of the final protein are altered.
glycine
arginine
9Why?
- The normal function of FGFR3 is to slow down the
formation of bone by inhibiting the proliferation
of chondrocytes, the cells that produce
cartilage. The mutation increases the activity of
FGFR3, severely limiting bone growth. The mutant
receptors actually work better than the wild-type.
10References
- GeneReviews Editor-in-chief Pagon, Roberta A.
Associate editors Cassidy, Suzanne B. Bird,
Thomas C. Dinulos, Mary Beth Feldman, Gerald
L. Smith, Richard J.H. Dolan, Cynthia R.
Technical editor Baskin, Patricia K. Seattle
(WA) University of Washington 1993-2006 - Genes and disease. Bethesda (MD) National
Library of Medicine (US), NCBI. - Human Molecular Genetics 2 2nd ed. Strachan, Tom
and Read, Andrew P. New York and London Garland
Science c1999 - http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/
- http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?dbO
MIM - RCSB Protein Data Bank http//www.rcsb.org/pdb/h
ome/home.do