Mutations in WNT1 cause different forms of bone fragility

  • Katharina Keupp
  • Filippo Beleggia
  • Hülya Kayserili
  • Aileen M Barnes
  • Magdalena Steiner
  • Oliver Semler
  • Björn Fischer
  • Gökhan Yigit
  • Claudia Y Janda
  • Jutta Becker
  • Stefan Breer
  • Umut Altunoglu
  • Johannes Grünhagen
  • Peter Krawitz
  • Jochen Hecht
  • Thorsten Schinke
  • Elena Makareeva
  • Ekkehart Lausch
  • Tufan Cankaya
  • José A Caparrós-Martín
  • Pablo Lapunzina
  • Samia Temtamy
  • Mona Aglan
  • Bernhard Zabel
  • Peer Eysel
  • Friederike Koerber
  • Sergey Leikin
  • K Christopher Garcia
  • Christian Netzer
  • Eckhard Schönau
  • Victor L Ruiz-Perez
  • Stefan Mundlos
  • Michael Amling
  • Uwe Kornak
  • Joan Marini
  • Bernd Wollnik

Abstract

We report that hypofunctional alleles of WNT1 cause autosomal-recessive osteogenesis imperfecta, a congenital disorder characterized by reduced bone mass and recurrent fractures. In consanguineous families, we identified five homozygous mutations in WNT1: one frameshift mutation, two missense mutations, one splice-site mutation, and one nonsense mutation. In addition, in a family affected by dominantly inherited early-onset osteoporosis, a heterozygous WNT1 missense mutation was identified in affected individuals. Initial functional analysis revealed that altered WNT1 proteins fail to activate canonical LRP5-mediated WNT-regulated β-catenin signaling. Furthermore, osteoblasts cultured in vitro showed enhanced Wnt1 expression with advancing differentiation, indicating a role of WNT1 in osteoblast function and bone development. Our finding that homozygous and heterozygous variants in WNT1 predispose to low-bone-mass phenotypes might advance the development of more effective therapeutic strategies for congenital forms of bone fragility, as well as for common forms of age-related osteoporosis.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN0002-9297
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 04.04.2013
PubMed 23499309