| Literature DB >> 24950769 |
Qi Liu, Zhen Wang, Yuhong Wu, Lihua Cao, Qingzhu Tang, Xuesha Xing, Hongwei Ma, Shifa Zhang, Yang Luo1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dyschromatosis symmetrica hereditaria (DSH) is an autosomal dominantly inherited skin disease associated with mutations of ADAR1, the gene that encodes a double-stranded RNA-specific adenosine deaminase. The purpose of this study was to investigate the potential mutations in ADAR1 in seven Chinese families with DSH.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24950769 PMCID: PMC4105233 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2350-15-69
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Figure 1Family Pedigrees in this study. Seven multi-generation families with DSH illustrated autosomal dominant inherence pattern with 29 affected individuals. (A-G) Pedigrees of the studied DSH family 1-7. Affected family members are presented by black symbols. The probands are arrowed.
Figure 2Typical skin lesions and mutations of thegene. (A, B) A mixture of hyperpigmented and hypopigmented macules distributed on the dorsal aspects of hands and feet of the proband of family 4 (III1); (C-G, I-J) Direct DNA sequencing showing the five novel mutations in the family 1–5 (C-G) and the two recurrent mutations in family 6 and 7 (I, J), respectively; (H) ClustaIW multiple alignment of various species around residue 1001 of human ADAR1.
Primers and conditions used in PCR for gene
| 1 | Forward: ACTTCCAGTGCGGAGTAGCGGAG | 221 | 66 |
| | Reverse: CAAGACGCACACGCTACGCACTGC | | |
| 2 | Forward: TCAAGGGCTGTTCCACAGGCAGC | 1754 | 61 |
| | Reverse: TCAGCCAAGACTGCGTCAGGAGC | | |
| 3-4 | Forward: GGCAGAAGGAGTGACCTAGACTC | 907 | 66 |
| | Reverse: GGTCAATCTGCCATCCCTGAGGAGG | | |
| 5-6 | Forward: AGAGGCTAGGTCAGGCTCCTCAGTC | 674 | 66 |
| | Reverse: TAAGAGGCCGTGGAGACAGGGCT | | |
| 7-8 | Forward: CATATGTTTGCAAGACTGGCC | 835 | 63 |
| | Reverse: TGCATGGACTCCAGGGGAGGATGAG | | |
| 9 | Forward: CTGAGGCTGTTTCTGCCTTGAAGC | 253 | 63 |
| | Reverse: GGGAACTGGAGCTCTCCACAG | | |
| 10 | Forward: GCCCTCAGCAGAAATGAAGGAGACCC | 456 | 65 |
| | Reverse: CTCAAACCCACAGTGGAGTGTGGC | | |
| 11 | Forward: CTGCTGTCCACCTCCAGTCTCCCAT | 385 | 66 |
| | Reverse: CAGCACCTCTGTGCCCAGTGAC | | |
| 12 | Forward: GTGGTTTGGTCCATTGGCGCCTGTG | 300 | 66 |
| | Reverse: GCATGCAGTTTGGGATCTGGGCAC | | |
| 13-14 | Forward: CTGGTAGCCCCAGTCAGAAGGTGCT | 864 | 66 |
| | Reverse: GATGCACCCTTGCAAGTCAGGGCAG | | |
| 15 | Forward: ACGGTGTCTCCACTGTGAGCTCCT | 372 | 63 |
| Reverse: GCTACGACCTACCTCTCTCACACCC |
Primer sequences used in RT-PCR and real-time quantitative RT-PCR
| RT-PCR | E1F: 5′-GAGGAAACGAAAGCGAAATTGAACCGGA-3′ |
| | E2F: 5′- AACTCCACATCTGCCTTGGAAGATCCTC -3′ |
| | E3R: 5′-CTCTCGGCCATTGATGACAACCTGGAAT-3′ |
| | E4R: 5′-TGTGCATACACTCAAGCAGTGTGGTGAC-3′ |
| Real-time RT-PCR | E9-10 F: 5′-GGCTTCATCAGGTTTCTCTAC-3′ |
| | E10-11R: 5′-CACGGAGCAGTGCTGATATAC-3′ |
| | GAPDH-F: 5′-CATCTTCCAGGAGCGAGATC-3′ |
| GAPDH-R: 5′-GCAAATGAGCCCCAGCCTTC-3′ |
Mutations of the gene identified in this study
| 1 | Back of hands and feet | c.556C > T | p.Gln186X | 2 | Nonsense |
| 2 | Back of hands and feet | c.3001C > T | p.Arg1001Cys | 11 | Missense |
| 3 | Back of hands and feet, ankles | c.1936_1937insTG | p.Phe646LeufsX16 | 5 | Frameshift |
| 4 | Back of hands and feet, face | c.1065_1068delGACA | p.Asp357ArgfsX47 | 2 | Frameshift |
| 5 | Back of hands and feet, face | c.1601G > A | p.Gly471AspfsX30 | 2 | Splicing |
| 6 | Back of hands and feet | c.2744C > T | p.Ser915Phe | 9 | Missense |
| 7 | Back of hands and feet | c.3463C > T | p.Arg1155Trp | 15 | Missense |
Figure 3Aberrant splicing pattern of caused by c.1601G > A mutation. (A) Locations of primers used in RT-PCR; (B) RT-PCR analysis revealed a transcript abnormality in ADAR1; (C) cDNA sequencing and predicted amino acid sequence of the aberrant (left) and normal (right) transcripts of ADAR1; (D) The relative quantities of ADAR1 mRNA level derived from real-time quantitative RT-PCR.
Figure 4expression assays. Total cellular lysates of HEK-293 cells transfected with FLAG-tagged wild-type or mutant plasmids were immunoblotted with FLAG antibody. beta-tubulin was used as an internal control.
Figure 5Novel mutations of identified in this study. The functional domains (Zα, DSRM, ADEAMc) were indicated in the figure. Zα: Z-DNA binding domains; DSRM: double stranded RNA binding domains; ADEAMc: deaminase domain.