| Literature DB >> 25712129 |
Calista K L Ng1, Mohammad Shboul1, Valerio Taverniti2, Carine Bonnard1, Hane Lee3, Ascia Eskin4, Stanley F Nelson5, Mohammed Al-Raqad6, Samah Altawalbeh6, Bertrand Séraphin7, Bruno Reversade8.
Abstract
mRNA decay is an essential and active process that allows cells to continuously adapt gene expression to internal and environmental cues. There are two mRNA degradation pathways: 3' to 5' and 5' to 3'. The DCPS protein is the scavenger mRNA decapping enzyme which functions in the last step of the 3' end mRNA decay pathway. We have identified a DCPS pathogenic mutation in a large family with three affected individuals presenting with a novel recessive syndrome consisting of craniofacial anomalies, intellectual disability and neuromuscular defects. Using patient's primary cells, we show that this homozygous splice mutation results in a DCPS loss-of-function allele. Diagnostic biochemical analyses using various m7G cap derivatives as substrates reveal no DCPS enzymatic activity in patient's cells. Our results implicate DCPS and more generally RNA catabolism, as a critical cellular process for neurological development, normal cognition and organismal homeostasis in humans.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25712129 PMCID: PMC4424953 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddv067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150
Figure 1.Phenotypic characteristics of three male propositi with an autosomal recessive Al-Raqad syndrome caused by a splice site mutation in DCPS. (A) Pedigree of Jordanian inbred family with three affected children (III:1, III:2 and III:6) and two unaffected sibs (III:7 and III:8) born to first-cousin parents. (B) Head shot of the three propositi with syndromic craniofacial anomalies, including deep set eyes, thin upper lip, small nose and mild microcephaly. (C) Homozygousity mapping delineates a single candidate region of 5.9 Mb on chromosome 11q. Whole-exome sequencing revealed a private mutation in DCPS in the first splice donor of intron 1: c.201 + 2T > C in the homozygous state. (D) Schematic representation of DCPS exons and location of the mapped mutation in its intron 1 (highlighted in red). Alternative cryptic splice site (underlined) and an in-frame premature termination codon (overlined) are detected 19 and 40 bp downstream of exon 1, respectively.
Clinical characteristics of the three affected children
| Gender, year of birth | Male, 2006 | Male, 2008 | Male, 2011 |
| Birth weight (kg)/length (cm), (%a) | 2.4 (<5th)/51 cm (75th) | 2.3 (<5th)/48 cm (10th–25th) | 2.9 (5th)/NA |
| Birth OFC, cm (%a) | 31 (<5th) | 33 (10th) | NA |
| Follow-up weight, kg | 5 (<5th) at 8 months | 6.5 (50th–75th) at 2 months | 5.1 (<3rd) at 6 months |
| 7.65 (<5th) at 13 months | 6.48 (<5th) at 4 months | 5.8 (<3rd) at 10 months | |
| 17.5 (25th) at 5 years | 11.5 (5th) at 3 years | 7 (<3rd) at 2 months | |
| 20.9 (10th) at 8 years | 17.6 (5th) at 6.5 years | 8 (<3rd) at 3.5 years | |
| Follow-up height, cm | 107 (25th) at 5 years | 80 (<5th) at 2 years | 64.5 (<3rd) at 6 months |
| 125.5 (30th) at 8 years | 109.5 (<5th) at 6.5 years | 84 (<3rd) at 3.5 years | |
| Follow-up OFC, cm | 40.5 (<3rd) at 8 months | 48 (10th) at 2 years | 41 (5th) at 6 months |
| 51 (25th) at 8 years | 51 (10th) at 6.5 years | 46 (<3rd) at 3.5 years | |
| Deep set eyes | + | + | + |
| Low set ears | + | + | + |
| Simple helices | + | + | + |
| Small nose | +/− | + | + |
| Small mouth | +/− | + | + |
| Flat face | + | + | + |
| Microcephaly | + | + | + |
| Sitting at age | 4 years | 2.5 years | 2.5 years |
| Walking at age | 6.5 years with ataxic gait | 3.5 years | − |
| Speaking at age | Few separate words at 7 years | Few separate words at 4.5 years | − |
| Others | Unable to stand for long periods | Unable to stand for long periods | Crawling only |
| Age at onset of infections | At birth and resolved after 2 years | At birth and resolved after 2 years | − |
| Neurological findings | Hypotonia, convulsion, epilepsy | Hypotonia | Hypotonia |
| Early constipation | + | + | + |
| Joint laxity | + | + | + |
| Partial syndactyly | + | + | + |
| Brachydactyly | + | + | + |
| Sandal gap | + | + | + |
| Hypopigmentation of skin | + | + | +++ |
| Blond hair | +/− | +/− | +++ |
| Involuntary papillary movement | + | − | + |
| Atrial septal defects | + | + | + |
NA, not available; OFC, occipitofrontal circumference.
aAge percentiles according to WHO Child Growth Standards.
Figure 2.Patient cells are devoid of major DCPS transcript/protein but minor isoform remains. (A) Schematic diagram showing the three different possible DCPS transcript isoforms. Isoform 1 represents the canonical transcript. Isoform 2 is a newly identified splice variant transcript predicted to encode a DCPS protein with additional 7 amino acids in-frame. Isoform 3 remains a hypothetical transcript which could not be documented. (B) QPCR detects reduced DPCS transcript levels, normalized to HPRT1, in mutant or carrier keratinocytes relative to control cells. Student t-tests were performed ***P < 0.0001 and *P < 0.01. (C) QPCR detects reduced DPCS transcript levels, normalized to HPRT1, in mutant primary fibroblasts relative to control cells. Student t-tests were performed ***P < 0.0001 and *P < 0.01. (D) RTPCR using primer sets designed to distinguish isoforms 1, 2 and 3 were performed on control and patients' cells. Sanger sequencing confirmed the identity of transcript isoform 2 as a normal cryptic splice form present in both control and patients' cells. (E) DCPS transcript isoform 3 cannot be detected in patient fibroblasts after blocking the NMD pathway with cycloheximide (CHX) treatment. (F) Western blot against DCPS detects different DCPS protein isoforms. Top panel shows a short exposure with loss of major DCPS isoform 1 in mutant cells relative to control or carrier cells. Under long exposure, minor isoform 2 becomes apparent (middle panel). Bottom panel shows equal loading across samples. (G) Immunofluorescent staining of patient-derived dermal primary fibroblasts showing loss of DCPS staining (red) in nucleus relative to control cells. F-ACTIN (green) is stained with phalloidin, scale bar: 40 μm.
Figure 3.Patients' cells have no detectable enzymatic DCPS activity. (A) Protein profiles of purified recombinant GST:DCPS isoform 1 and GST:DCPS isoform 2 and isoform 2 V68A on SDS–PAGE. The contaminant migrating below GST-DCPS serves as a loading control. Positions of migration of molecular weight markers are indicated on the left side. (B) Enzymatic assay demonstrates the reduced activity of the DCPS when 7 amino acids is inserted between exon 1 and exon 2 of DCPS protein, especially in the V68A mutant. (C) Enzymatic assay demonstrates the loss of DCPS activity in patient's cells using m7GpppG and m7GpppGm2′ substrates. Purified substrates are presented in lanes 1 and 5. (D) In vitro assays demonstrate that the absence of DCPS-dependent conversion of m7GTP in extracts of cells from two affected individuals. m7GTP is efficiently formed from m7GDP in the presence of ATP (lanes 5–8), demonstrating that all extracts are similarly active. Trace of ATP in extract explains the residual formation of m7GTP in the absence of added ATP (lanes 1–4). The purified substrate (+/− ATP) is presented in lanes 1 and 5.