AI Article Synopsis

  • Prune belly syndrome (PBS), or Eagle-Barret syndrome, is a rare condition mostly affecting males, characterized by urinary tract dilation, abdominal muscle deficiency, and undescended testes.
  • Researchers found a genetic link to PBS through a variant in the PIEZO1 gene, which plays a role in how cells respond to mechanical pressure.
  • Functional analysis showed that the PIEZO1 mutation leads to loss-of-function in certain channel activities, but the issue can potentially be fixed using Yoda1, a compound that activates PIEZO1, suggesting new treatment avenues for PBS.

Article Abstract

Prune belly syndrome (PBS), also known as Eagle-Barret syndrome, is a rare, multi-system congenital myopathy primarily affecting males. Phenotypically, PBS cases manifest three cardinal pathological features: urinary tract dilation with poorly contractile smooth muscle, wrinkled flaccid ventral abdominal wall with skeletal muscle deficiency, and intra-abdominal undescended testes. Genetically, PBS is poorly understood. After performing whole exome sequencing in PBS patients, we identify one compound heterozygous variant in the PIEZO1 gene. PIEZO1 is a cation-selective channel activated by various mechanical forces and widely expressed throughout the lower urinary tract. Here we conduct an extensive functional analysis of the PIEZO1 PBS variants that reveal loss-of-function characteristics in the pressure-induced normalized open probability (NPo) of the channel, while no change is observed in single-channel currents. Furthermore, Yoda1, a PIEZO1 activator, can rescue the NPo defect of the PBS mutant channels. Thus, PIEZO1 mutations may be causal for PBS and the in vitro cellular pathophysiological phenotype could be rescued by the small molecule, Yoda1. Activation of PIEZO1 might provide a promising means of treating PBS and other related bladder dysfunctional states.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10771463PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-44594-0DOI Listing

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