| Literature DB >> 25065914 |
Philip M Boone1, Bo Yuan1, Ian M Campbell1, Jennifer C Scull2, Marjorie A Withers1, Brett C Baggett1, Christine R Beck1, Christine J Shaw1, Pawel Stankiewicz3, Paolo Moretti4, Wendy E Goodwin5, Nichole Hein6, John K Fink7, Moon-Woo Seong8, Soo Hyun Seo8, Sung Sup Park8, Izabela D Karbassi9, Sat Dev Batish9, Andrés Ordóñez-Ugalde10, Beatriz Quintáns10, María-Jesús Sobrido10, Susanne Stemmler11, James R Lupski12.
Abstract
Intragenic copy-number variants (CNVs) contribute to the allelic spectrum of both Mendelian and complex disorders. Although pathogenic deletions and duplications in SPAST (mutations in which cause autosomal-dominant spastic paraplegia 4 [SPG4]) have been described, their origins and molecular consequences remain obscure. We mapped breakpoint junctions of 54 SPAST CNVs at nucleotide resolution. Diverse combinations of exons are deleted or duplicated, highlighting the importance of particular exons for spastin function. Of the 54 CNVs, 38 (70%) appear to be mediated by an Alu-based mechanism, suggesting that the Alu-rich genomic architecture of SPAST renders this locus susceptible to various genome rearrangements. Analysis of breakpoint Alus further informs a model of Alu-mediated CNV formation characterized by small CNV size and potential involvement of mechanisms other than homologous recombination. Twelve deletions (22%) overlap part of SPAST and a portion of a nearby, directly oriented gene, predicting novel chimeric genes in these subjects' genomes. cDNA from a subject with a SPAST final exon deletion contained multiple SPAST:SLC30A6 fusion transcripts, indicating that SPAST CNVs can have transcriptional effects beyond the gene itself. SLC30A6 has been implicated in Alzheimer disease, so these fusion gene data could explain a report of spastic paraplegia and dementia cosegregating in a family with deletion of the final exon of SPAST. Our findings provide evidence that the Alu genomic architecture of SPAST predisposes to diverse CNV alleles with distinct transcriptional--and possibly phenotypic--consequences. Moreover, we provide further mechanistic insights into Alu-mediated copy-number change that are extendable to other loci.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25065914 PMCID: PMC4129405 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.06.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025