Nail-Patella syndrome (NPS) is an inherited disease characterized by nail and skeletal anomalies, nephropathy and glaucoma. The diagnosis of NPS is based on clinical findings, including hypoplastic or absent patella, dystrophic nails, dysplasia of the elbows and iliac horns. However, the main determinant of NPS prognosis is nephropathy, which may range from asymptomatic proteinuria to end-stage renal disease. NPS is caused by heterozygous loss-of-function mutations in the gene, which encodes the LIM homeodomain transcription factor LMX1B. LMX1B serves an essential role in the physiological development of dorsal-ventral limb structures, morphogenesis and function of podocytes, as well as in development of the anterior segments of the eyes, and in certain types of neurons. The present study aimed to identify the disease-causing mutation in a 2-year old girl with nephrotic syndrome that evolved rapidly to end-stage renal disease. The patient showed classical symptoms of NPS including dystrophic nails and an absence of the patellae. DNA sequence analysis identified a novel missense variant in exon 4 of (c.709T>C, p.S237P); this substitution affected a conserved serine residue in the homeodomain of LMX1B and was predicted to be pathogenic. modeling of the homeodomain revealed that the p.S237P mutation converted the A236-S237-F238 segment of α-helix 1 into a strand. It was hypothesized that this mutation affected binding of the transcription factor to its target DNA, thus abrogating transcription activation, which would explain the phenotype that manifested in the patient.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7490783PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/br.2020.1356DOI Listing

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