| Literature DB >> 24842713 |
Przemyslaw Szafranski1, Avinash V Dharmadhikari, Jennifer A Wambach, Chris T Towe, Frances V White, R Mark Grady, Pirooz Eghtesady, F Sessions Cole, Gail Deutsch, Partha Sen, Paweł Stankiewicz.
Abstract
Position effects due to disruption of distant cis-regulatory regions have been reported for over 40 human gene loci; however, the underlying mechanisms of long-range gene regulation remain largely unknown. We report on two patients with alveolar capillary dysplasia with misalignment of pulmonary veins (ACDMPV) caused by overlapping genomic deletions that included a distant FOXF1 transcriptional enhancer mapping 0.3 Mb upstream to FOXF1 on 16q24.1. In one patient with atypical late-onset ACDMPV, a ∼1.5 Mb deletion removed the proximal 43% of this enhancer, leaving the lung-specific long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) gene LINC01081 intact. In the second patient with severe neonatal-onset ACDMPV, an overlapping ∼194 kb deletion disrupted LINC01081. Both deletions arose de novo on maternal copy of the chromosome 16, supporting the notion that FOXF1 is paternally imprinted in the human lungs. RNAi-mediated knock-down of LINC01081 in normal fetal lung fibroblasts showed that this lncRNA positively regulates FOXF1 transcript level, further indicating that decrease in LINC01081 expression can contribute to development of ACDMPV.Entities:
Keywords: ACDMPV; gene regulation; genomic imprinting; long non-coding RNA; position effect
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24842713 PMCID: PMC4107046 DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.36606
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Genet A ISSN: 1552-4825 Impact factor: 2.802