Abstract

Mutations in the ABCC6 gene cause soft tissue calcification in pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) and in some patients generalized arterial calcification of infancy (GACI). PXE is characterized by late-onset and progressive mineralization of elastic fibers in dermal, ocular and cardiovascular tissues. GACI patients present a more severe, often prenatal arterial calcification. We have tested ten frequent disease-causing ABCC6 missense mutants for the transport activity using Sf9 cells, characterized the subcellular localization in MDCKII cells and in mouse liver, and tested the phenotypic rescue in zebrafish. We aimed at identifying mutants with preserved transport activity but with improper plasma membrane localization for rescue by the chemical chaperone 4-phenylbutyrate (4-PBA). Seven of the mutants were transport-competent but mislocalized in mouse liver. The observed divergence in cellular localization of mutants in MDCKII cells vs. mouse liver underlined the limitations of this two-dimensional in vitro cell system. The functionality of ABCC6 mutants was tested in zebrafish and minimal rescue of the morpholino-induced phenotype was found. However, 4-PBA, a drug approved for clinical use, restored the plasma membrane localization of four ABCC6 mutants (R1114P, S1121W, Q1347H, R1314W), suggesting that allele-specific therapy may be useful for selected patients with PXE and GACI.

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