| Literature DB >> 25501393 |
Antonio Adamo1, Sina Atashpaz1, Pierre-Luc Germain1, Matteo Zanella1, Giuseppe D'Agostino1, Veronica Albertin1, Josh Chenoweth2, Lucia Micale3, Carmela Fusco3, Christian Unger4, Bartolomeo Augello3, Orazio Palumbo3, Brad Hamilton5, Massimo Carella3, Emilio Donti6, Giancarlo Pruneri1, Angelo Selicorni7, Elisa Biamino8, Paolo Prontera6, Ronald McKay2, Giuseppe Merla3, Giuseppe Testa9.
Abstract
Cell reprogramming promises to make characterization of the impact of human genetic variation on health and disease experimentally tractable by enabling the bridging of genotypes to phenotypes in developmentally relevant human cell lineages. Here we apply this paradigm to two disorders caused by symmetrical copy number variations of 7q11.23, which display a striking combination of shared and symmetrically opposite phenotypes--Williams-Beuren syndrome and 7q-microduplication syndrome. Through analysis of transgene-free patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells and their differentiated derivatives, we find that 7q11.23 dosage imbalance disrupts transcriptional circuits in disease-relevant pathways beginning in the pluripotent state. These alterations are then selectively amplified upon differentiation of the pluripotent cells into disease-relevant lineages. A considerable proportion of this transcriptional dysregulation is specifically caused by dosage imbalances in GTF2I, which encodes a key transcription factor at 7q11.23 that is associated with the LSD1 repressive chromatin complex and silences its dosage-sensitive targets.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25501393 DOI: 10.1038/ng.3169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330