Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Calmodulin
lysine methyl transferase (
CaM
KMT) is ubiquitously expressed and highly conserved from plants to vertebrates.
CaM
is frequently trimethylated at Lys-115, however, the role of
CaM
methylation in vertebrates has not been studied.
CaM
KMT was found to be homozygously deleted in the 2P21 deletion syndrome that includes 4 genes. These patients present with cystinuria, severe intellectual disabilities,
hypotonia
, mitochondrial disease and facial dysmorphism. Two siblings with deletion of three of the genes included in the 2P21 deletion syndrome presented with cystinuria,
hypotonia
, a mild/moderate mental retardation and a respiratory chain complex IV deficiency. To be able to attribute the functional significance of the methylation of
CaM
in the mouse and the contribution of
CaM
KMT to the clinical presentation of the 2p21deletion patients, we produced a mouse model lacking only
CaM
KMT with deletion borders as in the human 2p21deletion syndrome. No compensatory activity for
CaM
methylation was found. Impairment of complexes I and IV, and less significantly III, of the mitochondrial respiratory chain was more pronounced in the brain than in muscle.
CaM
KMT is essential for normal body growth and somatosensory development, as well as for the proper functioning of the adult mouse brain. Developmental delay was demonstrated for somatosensory function and for complex behavior, which involved both basal motor function and motivation. The mutant mice also had deficits in motor learning, complex coordination and learning of aversive stimuli. The mouse model contributes to the evaluation of the role of methylated
CaM
.
CaM
methylation appears to have a role in growth, muscle strength, somatosensory development and brain function. The current study has clinical implications for human patients. Patients presenting slow growth and muscle weakness that could result from a mitochondrial impairment and mental retardation should be considered for sequence analysis of the
CaM
KMT gene.
...
PMID:Calmodulin Methyltransferase Is Required for Growth, Muscle Strength, Somatosensory Development and Brain Function. 2624 64
Recent genome-wide studies found that patients with
hypotonia
, developmental delay, intellectual disability, congenital anomalies, characteristic facial dysmorphic features, and low cholesterol levels suffer from
K
aufman
o
culocerebrofacial
s
yndrome (KOS, also reported as blepharophimosis-ptosis-intellectual disability syndrome). The primary cause of KOS is autosomal recessive mutations in the gene
UBE3B
However, to date, there are no studies that have determined the cellular or enzymatic function of UBE3B. Here, we report that UBE3B is a mitochondrion-associated protein with
h
omologous to the
E
6-AP
C
t
erminus (HECT) E3 ubiquitin ligase activity. Mutating the catalytic cysteine (C1036A) or deleting the entire HECT domain (amino acids 758-1068) results in loss of UBE3B's ubiquitylation activity. Knockdown of UBE3B in human cells induces changes in mitochondrial morphology and physiology, a decrease in mitochondrial volume, and a severe suppression of cellular proliferation. We also discovered that UBE3B interacts with
calmodulin
via its N-terminal isoleucine-glutamine (IQ) motif. Deletion of the IQ motif (amino acids 29-58) results in loss of
calmodulin
binding and a significant increase in the
in vitro
ubiquitylation activity of UBE3B. In addition, we found that changes in calcium levels
in vitro
disrupt the
calmodulin
-UBE3B interaction. These studies demonstrate that UBE3B is an E3 ubiquitin ligase and reveal that the enzyme is regulated by
calmodulin
. Furthermore, the modulation of UBE3B via
calmodulin
and calcium implicates a role for calcium signaling in mitochondrial protein ubiquitylation, protein turnover, and disease.
...
PMID:UBE3B Is a Calmodulin-regulated, Mitochondrion-associated E3 Ubiquitin Ligase. 2800 68