Publication: The Epithelial Sodium Channel Is a Modifier of the Long-Term Nonprogressive Phenotype Associated with F508del CFTR Mutations
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2017-12
Published Version
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
American Thoracic Society
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.
Citation
Agrawal P, Wang R, Li H-M, Schmitz-Abe K, Simone-Roach C, Chen J, Shi J, Louie T, Sheng S, Towne M, Brainson Fillmore C, Matthay M, Kim CF, Bamshad M, Edmond MJ, Gerard NP, Kleyman TR, Gerard C. Epithelial Sodium Channel ENaC is a modifier of the long term non-progressive phenotype associated with F508del CFTR mutations. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Biol. 2017; 57:711-720.
Research Data
Abstract
Cystic fibrosis (CF) remains the most lethal genetic disease in the Caucasian population. However, there is great variability in clinical phenotypes and survival times, even among patients harboring the same genotype. We identified five patients with CF and a homozygous F508del mutation in the CFTR gene who were in their fifth or sixth decade of life and had shown minimal changes in lung function over a longitudinal period of more than 20 years. Because of the rarity of this long-term nonprogressive phenotype, we hypothesized these individuals may carry rare genetic variants in modifier genes that ameliorate disease severity. Individuals at the extremes of survival time and lung-function trajectory underwent whole-exome sequencing, and the sequencing data were filtered to include rare missense, stopgain, indel, and splicing variants present with a mean allele frequency of ,0.2% in general population databases. Epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) mutants were generated via site-directed mutagenesis and expressed for Xenopus oocyte assays. Four of the five individuals carried extremely rare or never reported variants in the SCNN1D and SCNN1B genes of the ENaC. Separately, an independently enriched rare variant in SCNN1D was identified in the Exome Variant Server database associated with a milder pulmonary disease phenotype. Functional analysis using Xenopus oocytes revealed that two of the three variants in d-ENaC encoded by SCNN1D exhibited hypomorphic channel activity. Our data suggest a potential role for d-ENaC in controlling sodium reabsorption in the airways, and advance the plausibility of ENaC as a therapeutic target in CF.
Description
Other Available Sources
Keywords
cystic fibrosis, ENaC, epithelial sodium channel, genetic modifier, SCNN1D
Terms of Use
Metadata Only