Abstract

Metatropic dysplasia is a congenital skeletal dysplasia characterized by severe platyspondyly, dumbbell-like deformity of long tubular bones, and progressive kyphoscoliosis with growth. It is caused by mutations in the gene TRPV4, encoding the transient receptor potential vanilloid 4, which acts as a calcium channel. Many heterozygous single base mutations of this gene have been associated with the disorder, showing autosomal dominant inheritance. Although abnormal endochondral ossification has been observed by histological examination of bone in a patient with lethal metatropic dysplasia, the etiology of the disorder remains largely unresolved. As dental pulp stem cells (DPSCs) are mesenchymal stem cells that differentiate into bone lineage cells, DPSCs derived from patients with congenital skeletal dysplasia might be useful as a disease-specific cellular model for etiological investigation. The purpose of this study was to clarify the pathological association between TRPV4 mutation and chondrocyte differentiation by analyzing DPSCs from a patient with non-lethal metatropic dysplasia. We identified a novel heterozygous single base mutation, c.1855C>T in TRPV4. This was predicted to be a missense mutation, p.L619F, in putative transmembrane segment 5. The mutation was repaired by CRISPR/Cas9 system to obtain isogenic control DPSCs for further analysis. The expression of stem cell markers and fibroblast-like morphology were comparable between patient-derived mutant and control DPSCs, although expression of TRPV4 was lower in mutant DPSCs than control DPSCs. Despite the lower TRPV4 expression in mutant DPSCs, the intracellular Ca2+ level was comparable at the basal level between mutant and control DPSCs, while its level was markedly higher following stimulation with 4α-phorbol 12,13-didecanoate (4αPDD), a specific agonist for TRPV4, in mutant DPSCs than in control DPSCs. In the presence of 4αPDD, we observed accelerated early chondrocyte differentiation and upregulated mRNA expression of SRY-box 9 (SOX9) in mutant DPSCs. Our findings suggested that the novel missense mutation c.1855C>T of TRPV4 was a gain-of-function mutation leading to enhanced intracellular Ca2+ level, which was associated with accelerated chondrocyte differentiation and SOX9 upregulation. Our results also suggest that patient-derived DPSCs can be a useful disease-specific cellular model for elucidating the pathological mechanism of metatropic dysplasia.

Highlights

  • Metatropic dysplasia (MD) is one of several skeletal dysplasias caused by heterozygous mutations in TRPV4, a gene encoding the transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 [1,2]

  • We analyzed dental pulp stem cell (DPSC) obtained from a patient with nonlethal MD as a disease-specific cellular model

  • MD-DPSCs with this mutation were compared with isogenic Ctrl-DPSCs in which c.1855C > T was repaired by the CRISPR/Cas9 system

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Summary

Introduction

Metatropic dysplasia (MD) is one of several skeletal dysplasias caused by heterozygous mutations in TRPV4, a gene encoding the transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 [1,2]. Various degrees of severity have been reported for non-lethal MD, and the disorder can be lethal [3–5]. Histological examination and the core radiographic findings including severe platyspondyly and dumbbell-shaped deformity of tubular bones suggest dysregulated endochondral ossification associated with dysfunction of TRPV4 [4]. Functional TRPV4 is activated by various noxious stimuli and can form homo- or hetero-tetramers on the cell membrane [6,7]. The ectopic expression of exclusively mutant TRPV4 in cell lines results in enhanced Ca2+ influx [3,4]. Considering that heterozygous mutations of TRPV4 cause MD, functional TRPV4 may be formed at various stoichiometric ratios of mutant and wild-type TRPV4 monomers in patients [2]. The mechanism of pathogenic dysfunction of TRPV4 channels in MD remains unclear

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