FINDINGS

A rare and as-yet-unnamed skeletal disorder shares a common “signaling pathway” with another rare skeletal disorder called Jansen metaphyseal chondrodysplasia. (A signaling pathway is a group of molecules in a cell that work together to control one or more cell functions.) The findings point to the mechanisms that control both normal and disordered development of the skeleton, and could even lead to a novel target for cancer drugs.

BACKGROUND

Skeletal disorders, or dysplasias — such as brittle bones or very short limbs — can arise from genetic mutations that affect the development of cartilage and bone. The researchers analyzed the genes of two children who are siblings who had a previously uncharacterized disorder that affects bone development as well as neurological and immune system development. The investigators wanted to determine whether the disorder shared genetic similarities with Jansen metaphyseal chondrodysplasia, or JMC. Both disorders cause similar changes in the bones.

METHOD

Analyzing the genetics of the siblings and their family, the team found that a homozygous mutation — an alteration that occurred in the copies of a gene each child inherited from each parent — of a protein called SIK3 was responsible for the siblings’ disorder. The siblings’ cells had a 60 percent reduction in SIK3 levels. But the siblings’ parents and their brother, all of whom are unaffected by the disorder, each only had one copy of the mutation.

The researchers discovered that the reduction in SIK3 affects a pathway called mTOR, which functions as a sensor for the cellular environment, including nutrients and growth factors, and which helps regulate cell metabolism, growth and proliferation. The researchers also illustrated that a patient with JMC had decreased levels of active SIK3 and altered mTOR signaling — which supports the idea that reduced SIK3 levels are responsible for disruption in normal bone cell growth.

IMPACT

The fact that two related but distinct skeletal disorders share a common pathway helps explain the molecular mechanisms that control both normal and disordered skeletal development. The involvement of mTOR is important, because its degradation is known to be linked to various diseases, including diabetes and cancer. Because it can alter mTOR activity, SIK3 could be a possible target for new drugs.

AUTHORS

Fabiana Csukasi, a project scientist in the department of orthopaedic surgery at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA is the study’s first author. Deborah Krakow, a UCLA professor of obstetrics and gynecology, of orthopaedic surgery, and of human genetics, is the study’s senior author. The paper’s other authors are from UCLA and from Masaryk University in the Czech Republic.

JOURNAL

The study was published in Science Translational Medicine.

FUNDING

The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, a Geisman Fellowship award from the Osteogenesis Imperfecta Foundation, the Agency for Healthcare Research of the Czech Republic, the Czech Science Foundation and the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic.