Abstract

Mutations in C19orf12 have been identified in patients affected by Neurodegeneration with Brain Iron Accumulation (NBIA), a clinical entity characterized by iron accumulation in the basal ganglia. By using western blot analysis with specific antibody and confocal studies, we showed that wild-type C19orf12 protein was not exclusively present in mitochondria, but also in the Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) and MAM (Mitochondria Associated Membrane), while mutant C19orf12 variants presented a different localization. Moreover, after induction of oxidative stress, a GFP-tagged C19orf12 wild-type protein was able to relocate to the cytosol. On the contrary, mutant isoforms were not able to respond to oxidative stress. High mitochondrial calcium concentration and increased H2O2 induced apoptosis were found in fibroblasts derived from one patient as compared to controls. C19orf12 protein is a 17 kDa mitochondrial membrane-associated protein whose function is still unknown. Our in silico investigation suggests that, the glycine zipper motifs of C19orf12 form helical regions spanning the membrane. The N- and C-terminal regions with respect to the transmembrane portion, on the contrary, are predicted to rearrange in a structural domain, which is homologs to the N-terminal regulatory domain of the magnesium transporter MgtE, suggesting that C19orf12 may act as a regulatory protein for human MgtE transporters. The mutations here described affect respectively one glycine residue of the glycine zipper motifs, which are involved in dimerization of transmembrane helices and predicted to impair the correct localization of the protein into the membranes, and one residue present in the regulatory domain, which is important for protein-protein interaction.

Highlights

  • The acronym Neurodegeneration with Brain Iron Accumulation (NBIA) identifies a group of clinically and genetically heterogeneous rare pathological conditions, characterized by progressive extra-pyramidal disorders and by evidence of focal iron accumulation in the brain, especially in basal ganglia, and globus pallidus, observed in MRI studies.Recently, thanks to the identification of new disease genes in these years there has been an increasing knowledge about NBIA, but pathomechanisms underlining these disorders are still not completely clear

  • Two forms inherited as autosomal dominant and recessive traits respectively are caused by mutations in genes coding for proteins directly involved in iron metabolism: neuroferritinopathy due to ferritin light chain gene (FTL) (MIM#606159) mutation (Chinnery et al, 2007) and aceruloplasminemia linked to mutations in the ceruloplasmin gene (CP) (MIM#117700) (McNeill et al, 2008)

  • A small fraction of the protein was detected in the membrane associated mitochondria (MAM), which represent physical association between mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum important for the transport of phospholipids (Patergnani et al, 2011; Marchi et al, 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

The acronym NBIA identifies a group of clinically and genetically heterogeneous rare pathological conditions, characterized by progressive extra-pyramidal disorders and by evidence of focal iron accumulation in the brain, especially in basal ganglia, and globus pallidus, observed in MRI studies.Recently, thanks to the identification of new disease genes in these years there has been an increasing knowledge about NBIA, but pathomechanisms underlining these disorders are still not completely clear. The other forms with autosomal recessive or X-linked transmission are due to mutations in genes (Rouault, 2013) coding for proteins with a variety of functions including: Coenzyme A biosynthesis, fatty acid metabolism, autophagy, and still unknown roles. This is the case for the C19orf gene, coding for a mitochondrial membrane protein, which mutations are responsible for a form of disease called MPAN for Mitochondrial membrane Protein Associated Neurodegeneration (Hartig et al, 2012). A Drosophila model (Iuso et al, 2014) has been generated, which shows neurological problems that can resemble the clinical features present in patients

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