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      Clinical severity and thermodynamic effects of iron-responsive element mutations in hereditary hyperferritinemia-cataract syndrome.

      The Journal of Biological Chemistry
      Base Sequence, Cataract, genetics, DNA Primers, Ferritins, blood, Humans, Iron, metabolism, Iron Metabolism Disorders, physiopathology, Iron-Regulatory Proteins, Iron-Sulfur Proteins, chemistry, Mutation, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Protein Structure, Secondary, RNA-Binding Proteins, Thermodynamics

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          Abstract

          Hereditary hyperferritinemia-cataract syndrome (HHCS) is a novel genetic disorder characterized by elevated serum ferritin and early onset cataract formation. The excessive ferritin production in HHCS patients arises from aberrant regulation of L-ferritin translation caused by mutations within the iron-responsive element (IRE) of the L-ferritin transcript. IREs serve as binding sites for iron regulatory proteins (IRPs), iron-sensing proteins that regulate ferritin translation. Previous observations suggested that each unique HHCS mutation conferred a characteristic degree of hyperferritinemia and cataract severity in affected individuals. Here we have measured the in vitro affinity of the IRPs for the mutant IREs and correlated decreases in binding affinity with clinical severity. Thermodynamic analysis of these IREs has also revealed that although some HHCS mutations lead to changes in the stability and secondary structure of the IRE, others appear to disrupt IRP-IRE recognition with minimal effect on IRE stability. HHCS is a noteworthy example of a human genetic disorder that arises from mutations within a protein-binding site of an mRNA cis-acting element. Analysis of the effects of these mutations on the energetics of the RNA-protein interaction explains the phenotypic variabilities of the disease state.

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