Human keratin 8 mutations that disturb filament assembly observed in inflammatory bowel disease patients
Open Access
- 15 April 2004
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Cell Science
- Vol. 117 (10) , 1989-1999
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.01043
Abstract
We have identified miss-sense mutations in keratin 8 in a subset of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn disease and ulcerative colitis). Inflammatory bowel diseases are a group of disorders that are polygenic in origin and involve intestinal epithelial breakdown. We investigated the possibility that these keratin mutations might contribute to the course of the disease by adversely affecting the keratin filament network that provides mechanical support to cells in epithelia. The mutations (Gly62 to Cys, Ile63 to Val and Lys464 to Asn) all lie outside the major mutation hotspots associated with severe disease in epidermal keratins, but using a combination of in vitro and cell culture assays we show that they all have detrimental effects on K8/K18 filament assembly in vitro and in cultured cells. The G62C mutation also gives rise to homodimer formation on oxidative stress to cultured intestinal epithelial cells, and homodimers are known to be polymerization incompetent. Impaired keratin assembly resulting from the K8 mutations found in some inflammatory bowel disease patients would be predicted to affect the maintenance and re-establishment of mechanical resilience in vivo, as required during keratin cytoskeleton remodeling in cell division and differentiation, which may lead to epithelial fragility in the gut. Simple epithelial keratins may thus be considered as candidates for genes contributing to a risk of inflammatory bowel disease.Keywords
This publication has 61 references indexed in Scilit:
- Association of keratin 8 gene mutation with chronic pancreatitisDigestive and Liver Disease, 2003
- The genetics of inflammatory bowel diseaseAlimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 2001
- Susceptibility to severe ulcerative colitis is associated with polymorphism in the central MHC gene IKBLGastroenterology, 2000
- Keratin-Dependent, Epithelial Resistance to Tumor Necrosis Factor-Induced ApoptosisThe Journal of cell biology, 2000
- A highly conserved lysine residue on the head domain of type II keratins is essential for the attachment of keratin intermediate filaments to the cornified cell envelope through isopeptide crosslinking by transglutaminasesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1998
- Human keratin diseases:Experimental Dermatology, 1996
- Colorectal hyperplasia and inflammation in keratin 8-deficient FVB/N mice.Genes & Development, 1994
- A leucine→proline mutation in the H1 subdomain of keratin 1 causes epidermolytic hyperkeratosisCell, 1992
- Point mutations in human keratin 14 genes of epidermolysis bullosa simplex patients: Genetic and functional analysesCell, 1991
- Domain- and sequence-specific phosphorylation of vimentin induces disassembly of the filament structureBiochemistry, 1989