Variable signaling activity by FOP ACVR1 mutations

J Haupt, M Xu, EM Shore - Bone, 2018 - Elsevier
J Haupt, M Xu, EM Shore
Bone, 2018Elsevier
Most patients with fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP), a rare genetic disorder of
heterotopic ossification, have the same causative mutation in ACVR1, R206H. However,
additional mutations within the ACVR1 BMP type I receptor have been identified in a small
number of FOP cases, often in patients with disease of lesser or greater severity than occurs
with R206H mutations. Genotype-phenotype correlations have been suggested in patients,
resulting in classification of FOP mutations based on location within different receptor …
Abstract
Most patients with fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP), a rare genetic disorder of heterotopic ossification, have the same causative mutation in ACVR1, R206H. However, additional mutations within the ACVR1 BMP type I receptor have been identified in a small number of FOP cases, often in patients with disease of lesser or greater severity than occurs with R206H mutations. Genotype-phenotype correlations have been suggested in patients, resulting in classification of FOP mutations based on location within different receptor domains and structural modeling. However while each of the mutations induces increased signaling through the BMP-pSmad1/5/8 pathway, the molecular mechanisms underlying functional differences of these FOP variant receptors remained undetermined. We now demonstrate that FOP mutations within the ACVR1 receptor kinase domain are more sensitive to low levels of BMP than mutations in the ACVR1 GS domain. Our data additionally confirm responsiveness of cells with FOP ACVR1 mutations to both BMP and Activin A ligands. We also have determined that constructs with FOP ACVR1 mutations that are engineered without the ligand-binding domain retain increased BMP-pSmad1/5/8 pathway activation relative to wild-type ACVR1, supporting that the mutant receptors can function through ligand-independent mechanisms either directly through mutant ACVR1 or through indirect mechanisms.
Elsevier