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Polycystic kidney disease: the complete structure of the PKD1 gene and its protein

Authors

  • M.A. Gluecksmann-Kuis
  • O. Tayber
  • E.A. Woolf
  • L. Bougueleret
  • N.H. Deng
  • G.D. Alperin
  • F. Iris
  • F. Hawkins
  • C. Munro
  • N. Lakey
  • G. Duyk
  • M.C. Schneider
  • L. Geng
  • F. Zhang
  • Z.H. Zhao
  • S. Torosian
  • J. Zhou
  • S.T. Reeders
  • P. Bork
  • M. Pohlschmidt
  • C. Lohning
  • B. Kraus
  • U. Nowicka
  • A.L.S. Leung
  • A.M. Frischauf

Journal

  • Cell

Citation

  • Cell 81 (2): 289-298

Abstract

  • Mutations in the PKD1 gene are the most common cause of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD). Other PKD1-like loci on chromosome 16 are approximately 97% identical to PKD1. To determine the authentic PKD1 sequence, we obtained the genomic sequence of the PKD1 locus and assembled a PKD1 transcript from the sequence of 46 exons. The 14.5 kb PKD1 transcript encodes a 4304 amino acid protein that has a novel domain architecture. The amino-terminal half of the protein consists of a mosaic of previously described domains, including leucine-rich repeats flanked by characteristic cysteine-rich structures, LDL-A and C-type lectin domains, and 14 units of a novel 80 amino acid domain. The presence of these domains suggests that the PKD1 protein is involved in adhesive protein-protein and protein-carbohydrate interactions in the extracellular compartment. We propose a hypothesis that links the predicted properties of the protein with the diverse phenotypic features of ADPKD.


DOI

doi:10.1016/0092-8674(95)90339-9