Conserved loci on the X chromosome confer phosphate homeostasis in mice and humans
- 1 October 1990
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Hindawi Limited in Genetics Research
- Vol. 56 (2-3) , 141-152
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0016672300035229
Abstract
Several genes expressed in kidney and other tissues determine phosphate homeostasis in extracellular fluid. The major form of inherited hypophosphatemia in humans involves an X-linked locus (HPDR, Xp22.31-p21.3). It has two murine homologues (HypandGy) which map to closely-linked but separate loci (crossover value 0·4%–0·8%). Both murine mutations impair Na+-phosphate cotransport in renal brush border membrane; an associated renal disorder of 1, 25-dihydroxyvitamin D3(1, 25(OH)2D) metabolism has been characterized inHypmice. Whereas experiments with culturedHyprenal epithelium indicate that the gene is expressed in kidney, studies showing the development of the mutant renal phenotype in normal mice parabiosed toHypmice implicate a circulating factor; these findings can be reconciled if the humoral factor is of renal origin. The gene dose effect of HPDR,HypandGyon serum phosphorus values is consistently deviant and heterozygotes resemble affected hemizygotes. The deviant effect is also seen on renal phosphate transport; all mutant females(Hyp/HypandHyp/+) have similar phenotypes. On the other hand, there is a normal gene dose effect of HPDR in mineralized tissue; tooth PRATIO (pulp area/tooth area) values for heterozygotes are distributed between those for affected males and normals. The tooth data imply that the X chromosome locus is expressed in both renal and non-renal cells. The polypeptide product of the X chromosome gene(s) is still unknown.Keywords
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