| Literature DB >> 30072435 |
Alexandre Bolze1,2, Bertrand Boisson3,4,5, Barbara Bosch1, Alexander Antipenko1, Matthieu Bouaziz4,5, Paul Sackstein1, Malik Chaker-Margot6, Vincent Barlogis7, Tracy Briggs8,9, Elena Colino10, Aurora C Elmore11, Alain Fischer5,12,13,14,15, Ferah Genel16, Angela Hewlett17, Maher Jedidi18, Jadranka Kelecic19, Renate Krüger20, Cheng-Lung Ku21, Dinakantha Kumararatne22, Alain Lefevre-Utile23, Sam Loughlin24, Nizar Mahlaoui5,12,13,15, Susanne Markus25, Juan-Miguel Garcia26, Mathilde Nizon27, Matias Oleastro28, Malgorzata Pac29, Capucine Picard5,12,30, Andrew J Pollard31, Carlos Rodriguez-Gallego32, Caroline Thomas33, Horst Von Bernuth20,34,35, Austen Worth36, Isabelle Meyts37,38, Maurizio Risolino39,40,41,42,43, Licia Selleri39,40,41,42,43, Anne Puel1,4,5, Sebastian Klinge6, Laurent Abel1,4,5, Jean-Laurent Casanova3,4,5,13,44.
Abstract
Isolated congenital asplenia (ICA) is the only known human developmental defect exclusively affecting a lymphoid organ. In 2013, we showed that private deleterious mutations in the protein-coding region of RPSA, encoding ribosomal protein SA, caused ICA by haploinsufficiency with complete penetrance. We reported seven heterozygous protein-coding mutations in 8 of the 23 kindreds studied, including 6 of the 8 multiplex kindreds. We have since enrolled 33 new kindreds, 5 of which are multiplex. We describe here 11 new heterozygous ICA-causing RPSA protein-coding mutations, and the first two mutations in the 5'-UTR of this gene, which disrupt mRNA splicing. Overall, 40 of the 73 ICA patients (55%) and 23 of the 56 kindreds (41%) carry mutations located in translated or untranslated exons of RPSA. Eleven of the 43 kindreds affected by sporadic disease (26%) carry RPSA mutations, whereas 12 of the 13 multiplex kindreds (92%) carry RPSA mutations. We also report that 6 of 18 (33%) protein-coding mutations and the two (100%) 5'-UTR mutations display incomplete penetrance. Three mutations were identified in two independent kindreds, due to a hotspot or a founder effect. Finally, RPSA ICA-causing mutations were demonstrated to be de novo in 7 of the 23 probands. Mutations in RPSA exons can affect the translated or untranslated regions and can underlie ICA with complete or incomplete penetrance.Entities:
Keywords: RPSA; incomplete penetrance; isolated congenital asplenia; ribosomopathy; spleen
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30072435 PMCID: PMC6112730 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1805437115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205