L5, CF: Gene to lung function Flashcards
Cystic Fibrosis: prevalence (carriers vs general), life expectancy, possible explanation for prevalence?
- 1 in 25 are carriers; most common genetic disorder
- Affects 1 in 2000 caucasians
- Life shortening condition; ~35 year expectancy, lower than 10 years if untreated
- Potentially advantageous in bacterial infections (e.g. Typhoid) -> Link to antagonistic pleiotropy, historical explanation for high prevalence
Major clinical features of CF (x5):
- High salt concentration in sweat
- Pancreatic failure (exocrine pancreatic insufficiency; unable to wash out enzymes produced -> blockages)
- Gut unable to absorb nutrients (malnutrition)
- Lung is crippled with recurrent and persistent infections -> most deadly effect
- Infertility
CFTR expression, nomenclature
- Expressed in epithelial cells, principally those of the pancreas, sweat glands, salivary glands, lung, intestine and reproductive tract
- Typically expressed on apical membrane of cell
- Named CFTR as it was originally thought to be a regulator of chloride permeability and not an ion channel
Structure of CFTR:
- TM domain 1 and 2
- Nucleotide binding domains 1 and 2
- Regulatory domain (phosph. site)
- TRL: Regulation of other transporters and proteins; signal transduction role
- Diagram in notes/FCs
Evidence that CFTR functions as a channel: (5 points regarding electrophysiology, expression experiments etc)
- Expression of CFTR in a variety of heterelogous expression systems produces current similar to that measured in epithelial cells
- Activation depends on both cAMP-dependent protein kinase A and ATP binding at NBDs
- Channel with these properties is missing in CF sufferers
- Purified protein incorporated into artificial bilayers give chloride currents
- Mutation of the channel itself have been shown to alter channel activity properties
- Co-expression of two different mutants of CFTR channels with different functional characteristics - no hybrid channels produced (therefore MONOMERIC)
Classes of CFTR defect: Detail and background
- > 1000 mutants known
- 4 main classes…
- Class I: Defective protein synthesis (truncations caused by frameshifts)
- Class II: Defective trafficking of proteins -> loss of CFTR expression in membrane
- Class III: Defective regulation of channel
- Class IV: Altered ion permeation
- Class V: Insufficient protein
- Class VI: Accelerated turnover
+ List the 5 classes of CFTR mutant by affect
- Protein production
- Protein processing (trafficking)
- Gating
- Conduction
- Insufficient protein
- Accelerated turnover
2 examples from different CFTR mutant classes (Classes II and VI):
- Most common (>65%) is F508del (Class II); drops phenylalanine, leading to a minor misfolding of protein that, in golgi, gets stuck and is not released as a vesicle for transport to PM
- Q1412X: C-terminal truncation (Class VI)
Account for the varying severities between CFTR patients:
- Mutations leading to total LOF -> severe form
- Mutations resulting in reduced Cl- current -> milder form (e.g. reduced single channel conductance, reduced open probability or reduced levels of protein expression)
How does CFTR interact with other ion channels? -> 2 examples with structural detail
- TRL domain of CFTR thought to interact
- ENaC: Na+/H+ permeable -> target for ability to retain salt; complex ligand gating, amiloride sensitive; downregulation of sodium conductance
- CaCC: Calcium-activated Cl- channels , 8TMS; ubiquitous in animal cell PM e.g. in frog oocyte expression; upregulation of chloride uptake
Pathophysiology of CF in the lung:
- Unremitting and inappropriate absorption of the ASL -> collapse of periciliary layer and mucus layer
- Hyperviscous mucus layer in lungs -> static, accumulation of bacteria on biofilm, bacterial DNA adds to viscosity
- Eventual infection
CF therapies:
- Hydrating lung by inhaling hypertonic saline (temporarily relieving symptoms)
- Administer drugs to affect transporters -> redirection of transport to secretory direction
Ivacaftor:
- Increases open probability of CFTR channel
- Effective for ~ 5% of CF patients
- More effective when mixed with drugs that help correct the malformed CFTR trapped in golgi -> Aiding transport to PM
How do mutations in CFTR in sweat glands cause symptoms of CF?
- Na/K ATPase in the basolateral membrane creates and e/c gradient for Na+ uptake across apical membrane
- Cl- follows passively via CFTR to maintain neutrality
- Duct epithelium is impermeable (tight junctions) to water -> leaves via duct to skin
- In CF, L- uptake is inhibited, so Na+ uptake cause membrane depolarisation, reducing driving force for Na+ uptake from duct -> reduced NaCl absorption
- See notes for diagram
CFTR mutations in the lung: How is ASL normally maintained vs in CF patients?
- Epithelial duct permeable to water -> follows balance of solute
- Basal conditions: water absorbed from AS L (basolaterally expressed Na/K ATPase sets up e/c gradient, ENaC -> Na+ influx, CFTR -> Cl- influx
- ASL too thin: upregulation of CFTR, subsequent inhibition of ENaC; more Cl- efflux, lack of Na+ influx -> water and Na+ pass through tight junction
- CF sufferers: decreased capacity for Cl- efflux and constant, unregulated Na+ uptake -> unremitting and inappropriate absorption of the ASL