Literature DB >> 29357978

Reccurrent F8 Intronic Deletion Found in Mild Hemophilia A Causes Alu Exonization.

Yohann Jourdy1, Alexandre Janin2, Mathilde Fretigny3, Anne Lienhart4, Claude Négrier5, Dominique Bozon6, Christine Vinciguerra7.   

Abstract

Incorporation of distant intronic sequences in mature mRNA is an underappreciated cause of genetic disease. Several disease-causing pseudoexons have been found to contain repetitive elements such as Alu elements. This study describes an original pathological mechanism by which a small intronic deletion leads to Alu exonization. We identified an intronic deletion, c.2113+461_2113+473del, in the F8 intron 13, in two individuals with mild hemophilia A. In vivo and in vitro transcript analysis found an aberrant transcript, with an insertion of a 122-bp intronic fragment (c.2113_2114ins2113+477_2113+598) at the exon 13-14 junction. This out-of-frame insertion is predicted to lead to truncated protein (p.Gly705Aspfs∗37). DNA sequencing analysis found that the pseudoexon corresponds to antisense AluY element and the deletion removed a part of the poly(T)-tail from the right arm of these AluY. The heterogenous nuclear riboprotein C1/C2 (hnRNP C) is an important antisense Alu-derived cryptic exon silencer and binds to poly(T)-tracts. Disruption of the hnRNP C binding site in AluY T-tract by mutagenesis or hnRNP C knockdown using siRNA in HeLa cells reproduced the effect of c.2113+461_2113+473del. The screening of 114 unrelated families with mild hemophilia A in whom no genetic event was previously identified found a deletion in the poly(T)-tail of AluY in intron 13 in 54% of case subjects (n = 61/114). In conclusion, this study describes a deletion leading to Alu exonization found in 6.1% of families with mild hemophila A in France.
Copyright © 2017 American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Alu elements; hemophilia A; hnRNP C; intronic deletion

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29357978      PMCID: PMC5985402          DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.12.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Hum Genet        ISSN: 0002-9297            Impact factor:   11.025


  33 in total

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