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XB-ART-56617
J Clin Invest 2020 Feb 03;1302:813-826. doi: 10.1172/JCI129308.
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Disrupted ER membrane protein complex-mediated topogenesis drives congenital neural crest defects.

Marquez J , Criscione J , Charney RM , Prasad MS , Hwang WY , Mis EK , García-Castro MI , Khokha MK .


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Multipass membrane proteins have a myriad of functions, including transduction of cell-cell signals, ion transport, and photoreception. Insertion of these proteins into the membrane depends on the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane protein complex (EMC). Recently, birth defects have been observed in patients with variants in the gene encoding a member of this complex, EMC1. Patient phenotypes include congenital heart disease, craniofacial malformations, and neurodevelopmental disease. However, a molecular connection between EMC1 and these birth defects is lacking. Using Xenopus, we identified defects in neural crest cells (NCCs) upon emc1 depletion. We then used unbiased proteomics and discovered a critical role for emc1 in WNT signaling. Consistent with this, readouts of WNT signaling and Frizzled (Fzd) levels were reduced in emc1-depleted embryos, while NCC defects could be rescued with β-catenin. Interestingly, other transmembrane proteins were mislocalized upon emc1 depletion, providing insight into additional patient phenotypes. To translate our findings back to humans, we found that EMC1 was necessary for human NCC development in vitro. Finally, we tested patient variants in our Xenopus model and found the majority to be loss-of-function alleles. Our findings define molecular mechanisms whereby EMC1 dysfunction causes disease phenotypes through dysfunctional multipass membrane protein topogenesis.

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Species referenced: Xenopus
Genes referenced: chrd ctnnb1 foxd3 fzd2 fzd7 nup85 pax7 rpe slc12a3 snai2 sox10 sox9 xbp1
GO keywords: neural crest cell development
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References [+] :
Abbruzzese, The Wnt receptor Frizzled-4 modulates ADAM13 metalloprotease activity. 2015, Pubmed, Xenbase