| Literature DB >> 26637980 |
Lindsay C Burrage1, Wu-Lin Charng2, Mohammad K Eldomery2, Jason R Willer3, Erica E Davis3, Dorien Lugtenberg4, Wenmiao Zhu5, Magalie S Leduc2, Zeynep C Akdemir2, Mahshid Azamian2, Gladys Zapata2, Patricia P Hernandez2, Jeroen Schoots4, Sonja A de Munnik4, Ronald Roepman4, Jillian N Pearring6, Shalini Jhangiani7, Nicholas Katsanis3, Lisenka E L M Vissers4, Han G Brunner4, Arthur L Beaudet2, Jill A Rosenfeld2, Donna M Muzny8, Richard A Gibbs8, Christine M Eng9, Fan Xia9, Seema R Lalani9, James R Lupski10, Ernie M H F Bongers11, Yaping Yang12.
Abstract
Meier-Gorlin syndrome (MGS) is a genetically heterogeneous primordial dwarfism syndrome known to be caused by biallelic loss-of-function mutations in one of five genes encoding pre-replication complex proteins: ORC1, ORC4, ORC6, CDT1, and CDC6. Mutations in these genes cause disruption of the origin of DNA replication initiation. To date, only an autosomal-recessive inheritance pattern has been described in individuals with this disorder, with a molecular etiology established in about three-fourths of cases. Here, we report three subjects with MGS and de novo heterozygous mutations in the 5' end of GMNN, encoding the DNA replication inhibitor geminin. We identified two truncating mutations in exon 2 (the 1(st) coding exon), c.16A>T (p.Lys6(∗)) and c.35_38delTCAA (p.Ile12Lysfs(∗)4), and one missense mutation, c.50A>G (p.Lys17Arg), affecting the second-to-last nucleotide of exon 2 and possibly RNA splicing. Geminin is present during the S, G2, and M phases of the cell cycle and is degraded during the metaphase-anaphase transition by the anaphase-promoting complex (APC), which recognizes the destruction box sequence near the 5' end of the geminin protein. All three GMNN mutations identified alter sites 5' to residue Met28 of the protein, which is located within the destruction box. We present data supporting a gain-of-function mechanism, in which the GMNN mutations result in proteins lacking the destruction box and hence increased protein stability and prolonged inhibition of replication leading to autosomal-dominant MGS.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26637980 PMCID: PMC4678788 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2015.11.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025