| Literature DB >> 25943194 |
Helen Fryssira1, Stella Amenta2, Deniz Kanber3, Christalena Sofocleous4, Evangelia Lykopoulou5, Christina Kanaka-Gantenbein6, Flavia Cerrato7, Hermann-Josef Lüdecke8, Susanne Bens9, Andrea Riccio10, Karin Buiting11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) is a rare pediatric overgrowth disorder with a variable clinical phenotype caused by deregulation affecting imprinted genes in the chromosomal region 11p15. Alterations of the imprinting control region 1 (ICR1) at the IGF2/H19 locus resulting in biallelic expression of IGF2 and biallelic silencing of H19 account for approximately 10% of patients with BWS. The majority of these patients have epimutations of the ICR1 without detectable DNA sequence changes. Only a few patients were found to have deletions. Most of these deletions are small affecting different parts of the ICR1 differentially methylated region (ICR1-DMR) removing target sequences for CTCF. Only a very few deletions reported so far include the H19 gene in addition to the CTCF binding sites. None of these deletions include IGF2. CASEEntities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25943194 PMCID: PMC4630834 DOI: 10.1186/s12881-015-0173-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Figure 1Patient A. Pedigree of the BWS family. Deletion carriers are indicated by filled circles or boxes. B. Frontal view of the newborn patients face C. Linear crease of the ear lobe D. Presence of omphalocele at 1 month.
Figure 2Overview of H19/IGF2 genomic region on 11p15.5 including deletions and putative enhancer elements. Identification of candidate IGF2 enhancer regions through the integration of data of chromatin features and sequence conservation at 11p15.5. The image shows an UCSC Genome Browser screen shot including the most relevant information used to locate the putative enhancers. Two custom tracks have been added: the copy number variations track showing the extension of the 100 kb deletion described in the paper and the 137 kb deletion described by Baskin et al., 2014 (red bars); the putative enhancers of IGF2 showing four candidate regions represented by green boxes. Note that these regions correspond to evolutionary conserved intronic regions that are enriched in H3K27Ac, H3K4me1, DNase hypersensitive sites and transcription factors binding as reported by ENCODE (http://genome.ucsc.edu Chr11: 1,895,000-2,195,000; GRCh37/hg19 Feb 2009 assembly).
Figure 3Comparative methylation plots and heatmaps for the IGF2 DMR0. (A) Schematic view of the IGF2 DMR0 and the location of the amplicon used for deep bisulfite sequencing (black bar; not drawn to scale). The exact position for the amplicon is chr11:2169292-2169605 (hg19, UCSC Browser). (B) The average methylation of the IGF2 DMR0 in the patient, his parents and a normal control. Compared to the father and the normal control (NC) the mother and the patient show a hypermethylation for the IGF2 DMR0. (C) The average methylation of the separated alleles (SNP rs3741210) in a normal control and the patient. One allele of the normal control is hypermethylated (indicating that it represents the paternal allele), whereas the other allele is hypomethylated (indicating that it representing the maternal allele). In the patient the paternal allele (A) is hypermethylated and the maternal allele (G), which should be hypomethylated, is hypermethylated as well. Each square represents a CpG dinucleotide with its average methylation level, each line a specific sample. The average methylation over the analyzed region is given in percentage on the left under the sample ID together with the number of analyzed reads in brackets. The methylation was analyzed over 6 CpGs.