Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

A histopathological and genomics study of the mutated human FAM111B gene related POIKTMP disease

Fibrosis is a pathological feature of many chronic inflammatory diseases, eventually leading to organ failure and death. POIKTMP is a rare, multi-organ fibrosing disease which is associated with mutations of the human FAM111B gene. FAM111B gene codes for a protein whose function is not well characte...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tambwe, Nadine
Other Authors: Arowolo, Afolake
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of General Surgery 2024
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613217856946176
access_status_str Open Access
author Tambwe, Nadine
author2 Arowolo, Afolake
author_browse Arowolo, Afolake
Tambwe, Nadine
author_facet Arowolo, Afolake
Tambwe, Nadine
author_sort Tambwe, Nadine
collection Thesis
description Fibrosis is a pathological feature of many chronic inflammatory diseases, eventually leading to organ failure and death. POIKTMP is a rare, multi-organ fibrosing disease which is associated with mutations of the human FAM111B gene. FAM111B gene codes for a protein whose function is not well characterized. Therefore, elucidating the mechanism of FAM111B or its mutations in POIKTMP is beneficial to understanding the complexities surrounding this multisystemic fibrosing disease. The study sought to understand the pathogenesis of fibrosis, its role in POIKTMP and its causative gene mutation: FAM111B Y621D. First, Sanger sequencing was used to confirm the presence of the FAM111B Y621D mutation using DNA isolated and amplified from post-mortem FFPE tissues of a POIKTMP patient first described with the disease in South African Following that, qRT-PCR was employed to assess gene expression changes between the patient and the familial control. The RT2 Profiler Human fibrosis PCR Array was then used to associate POIKTMP and 84 known fibrotic markers to propose a possible fibrotic pathway associated with POIKTMP disease using mRNA from the lung and skin POIKTMP patient tissues. Gene-set enrichment analysis (GSEA) using Enrichr, a computational GSEA tool, was used to predict enrichment analysis between the identified upregulated fibrosis markers and the FAM111B gene. Finally, Immunohistochemistry was used to identify cellular and sub-cellular protein distribution of FAM111B and other fibroproliferative markers of interest to annotate pathological changes. The results from this study validated the FAM111B Y621D mutation in the affected tissues. Next, FAM111B mRNA was shown to be downregulated in the lungs and skeletal muscle tissues of the POIKTMP patient. The human fibrosis PCR array experiments identified eight upregulated fibrotic markers: MMP3, MMP13, PDGFA, ITGB-1, THBS-2, COL3A1, TGFβ3, and CCN2 in the patient lungs and skin tissues, which were validated by qRT-PCR. Furthermore, these genes with FAM111B form a gene-list that was used in interrogating various gene-set libraries in the gene-set enrichment analysis. FAM111B was enriched in some gene-set libraries within the Diseases/Drugs and Cell type categories. The GSEA terms enriched within these libraries are the pathways associated with SARS-COVID-19 perturbations and cell/tissue types related to the small intestine, breast, oesophagus, thyroid, smooth muscle and stromal cells of some of these organs. Lastly, immunohistochemistry results corroborated this study's mRNA expression analysis by showing that FAM111B was more highly expressed in the skin than in the lung patient. TGF-β1 and Ki-67 markers were 12 assessed from protein expression, which resulted in higher expression in the POIKTMP patient skin tissue than in the lungs. Altogether, our data suggest that FAM111B and mutations in this gene play a pivotal role in POIKTMP and other fibrosing organ diseases, representing a potential disease biomarker and possible therapeutic target in POIKTMP and other fibrotic disorders.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39877
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:38.580Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Division of General Surgery
publisherStr Division of General Surgery
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39877 A histopathological and genomics study of the mutated human FAM111B gene related POIKTMP disease Tambwe, Nadine Arowolo, Afolake Medicine Fibrosis is a pathological feature of many chronic inflammatory diseases, eventually leading to organ failure and death. POIKTMP is a rare, multi-organ fibrosing disease which is associated with mutations of the human FAM111B gene. FAM111B gene codes for a protein whose function is not well characterized. Therefore, elucidating the mechanism of FAM111B or its mutations in POIKTMP is beneficial to understanding the complexities surrounding this multisystemic fibrosing disease. The study sought to understand the pathogenesis of fibrosis, its role in POIKTMP and its causative gene mutation: FAM111B Y621D. First, Sanger sequencing was used to confirm the presence of the FAM111B Y621D mutation using DNA isolated and amplified from post-mortem FFPE tissues of a POIKTMP patient first described with the disease in South African Following that, qRT-PCR was employed to assess gene expression changes between the patient and the familial control. The RT2 Profiler Human fibrosis PCR Array was then used to associate POIKTMP and 84 known fibrotic markers to propose a possible fibrotic pathway associated with POIKTMP disease using mRNA from the lung and skin POIKTMP patient tissues. Gene-set enrichment analysis (GSEA) using Enrichr, a computational GSEA tool, was used to predict enrichment analysis between the identified upregulated fibrosis markers and the FAM111B gene. Finally, Immunohistochemistry was used to identify cellular and sub-cellular protein distribution of FAM111B and other fibroproliferative markers of interest to annotate pathological changes. The results from this study validated the FAM111B Y621D mutation in the affected tissues. Next, FAM111B mRNA was shown to be downregulated in the lungs and skeletal muscle tissues of the POIKTMP patient. The human fibrosis PCR array experiments identified eight upregulated fibrotic markers: MMP3, MMP13, PDGFA, ITGB-1, THBS-2, COL3A1, TGFβ3, and CCN2 in the patient lungs and skin tissues, which were validated by qRT-PCR. Furthermore, these genes with FAM111B form a gene-list that was used in interrogating various gene-set libraries in the gene-set enrichment analysis. FAM111B was enriched in some gene-set libraries within the Diseases/Drugs and Cell type categories. The GSEA terms enriched within these libraries are the pathways associated with SARS-COVID-19 perturbations and cell/tissue types related to the small intestine, breast, oesophagus, thyroid, smooth muscle and stromal cells of some of these organs. Lastly, immunohistochemistry results corroborated this study's mRNA expression analysis by showing that FAM111B was more highly expressed in the skin than in the lung patient. TGF-β1 and Ki-67 markers were 12 assessed from protein expression, which resulted in higher expression in the POIKTMP patient skin tissue than in the lungs. Altogether, our data suggest that FAM111B and mutations in this gene play a pivotal role in POIKTMP and other fibrosing organ diseases, representing a potential disease biomarker and possible therapeutic target in POIKTMP and other fibrotic disorders. 2024-06-05T13:30:53Z 2024-06-05T13:30:53Z 2023 2024-06-05T12:58:30Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39877 eng application/pdf Division of General Surgery Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Medicine
Tambwe, Nadine
A histopathological and genomics study of the mutated human FAM111B gene related POIKTMP disease
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A histopathological and genomics study of the mutated human FAM111B gene related POIKTMP disease
title_full A histopathological and genomics study of the mutated human FAM111B gene related POIKTMP disease
title_fullStr A histopathological and genomics study of the mutated human FAM111B gene related POIKTMP disease
title_full_unstemmed A histopathological and genomics study of the mutated human FAM111B gene related POIKTMP disease
title_short A histopathological and genomics study of the mutated human FAM111B gene related POIKTMP disease
title_sort histopathological and genomics study of the mutated human fam111b gene related poiktmp disease
topic Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39877
work_keys_str_mv AT tambwenadine ahistopathologicalandgenomicsstudyofthemutatedhumanfam111bgenerelatedpoiktmpdisease
AT tambwenadine histopathologicalandgenomicsstudyofthemutatedhumanfam111bgenerelatedpoiktmpdisease