| Literature DB >> 31038472 |
Patrick G Gallagher1,2,3, Yelena Maksimova1, Kimberly Lezon-Geyda1, Peter E Newburger4, Desiree Medeiros5, Robin D Hanson6, Jennifer Rothman7, Sara Israels8, Donna A Wall9, Robert F Sidonio10, Colin Sieff11, L Kate Gowans12, Nupur Mittal13, Roland Rivera-Santiago14, David W Speicher14, Susan J Baserga2,15, Vincent P Schulz1.
Abstract
The etiology of severe hemolytic anemia in most patients with recessive hereditary spherocytosis (rHS) and the related disorder hereditary pyropoikilocytosis (HPP) is unknown. Whole exome sequencing of DNA from probands of 24 rHS or HPP kindreds identified numerous mutations in erythrocyte membrane α-spectrin (SPTA1). Twenty-eight mutations were novel, with null alleles frequently found in trans to missense mutations. No mutations were identified in a third of SPTA1 alleles (17/48). Whole genome sequencing revealed linkage disequilibrium between the common rHS-linked α-spectrinBug Hill polymorphism and a rare intron 30 variant in all 17 mutation-negative alleles. In vitro minigene studies and in vivo splicing analyses revealed the intron 30 variant changes a weak alternate branch point (BP) to a strong BP. This change leads to increased utilization of an alternate 3' splice acceptor site, perturbing normal α-spectrin mRNA splicing and creating an elongated mRNA transcript. In vivo mRNA stability studies revealed the newly created termination codon in the elongated transcript activates nonsense mediated decay leading to spectrin deficiency. These results demonstrate a unique mechanism of human genetic disease contributes to the etiology of a third of cases of rHS, facilitating diagnosis and treatment of severe anemia, and identifying a new target for therapeutic manipulation.Entities:
Keywords: Genetic diseases; Genetics; Hematology
Year: 2019 PMID: 31038472 PMCID: PMC6597203 DOI: 10.1172/JCI127195
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808