| Literature DB >> 31427717 |
Clara Xiol1, Silvia Vidal1, Ainhoa Pascual-Alonso1, Laura Blasco1, Núria Brandi2, Paola Pacheco1, Edgar Gerotina1, Mar O'Callaghan3, Mercè Pineda4, Judith Armstrong5,6,7.
Abstract
Rett syndrome (RTT) is a severe neurological disorder usually caused by mutations in the MECP2 gene. Since the MECP2 gene is located on the X chromosome, X chromosome inactivation (XCI) could play a role in the wide range of phenotypic variation of RTT patients; however, classical methylation-based protocols to evaluate XCI could not determine whether the preferentially inactivated X chromosome carried the mutant or the wild-type allele. Therefore, we developed an allele-specific methylation-based assay to evaluate methylation at the loci of several recurrent MECP2 mutations. We analyzed the XCI patterns in the blood of 174 RTT patients, but we did not find a clear correlation between XCI and the clinical presentation. We also compared XCI in blood and brain cortex samples of two patients and found differences between XCI patterns in these tissues. However, RTT mainly being a neurological disease complicates the establishment of a correlation between the XCI in blood and the clinical presentation of the patients. Furthermore, we analyzed MECP2 transcript levels and found differences from the expected levels according to XCI. Many factors other than XCI could affect the RTT phenotype, which in combination could influence the clinical presentation of RTT patients to a greater extent than slight variations in the XCI pattern.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31427717 PMCID: PMC6700087 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-48385-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Proportion of patients per mutation with a skewed XCI pattern according to at least one of the two techniques used for assessing XCI (XCI-AR and XCI-AS).
| Mutation | Type of mutation | MeCP2 region | Number of patients with skewed XCI | % of patients with skewed XCI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| c.455C > G (p.P152R) | Missense | MBD | 0/6 | 0% |
| c.473C > T (p.T158M) | Missense | MBD | 0/33 | 0% |
| c.502C > T (p.R168X) | Nonsense | IDR | 5/29 | 17.2% |
| c.674C > G (p.P255R) | Missense | TRD | 0/2 | 0% |
| c.763C > T (p.R255X) | Nonsense | TRD | 4/36 | 11.1% |
| c.806delG (p.G269fs) | Frameshift | TRD-NLS | 1/11 | 9.1% |
| c.808C > T (p.R270X) | Nonsense | TRD-NLS | 4/20 | 20% |
| c.880C > T (p.R294X) | Nonsense | TRD | 1/20 | 5% |
| c.916C > T (p.R306C) | Missense | TRD | 1/15 | 6.7% |
| Large deletions | Deletion | Exons 3-4 | 1/2 | 50% |
| All | — | — | 17/174 | 9.8% |
Data of patients with skewed XCI according to at least one of the two assays.
| Patient Number | XCI-AR | XCI-AS | Global Score | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WT | Mut | |||
| P47 | n.i. | 81.5 | 18.5 | 13 |
| P60 | 84:16 | 28 | 72 | 16 |
| P68 | 75:25 | 15.5 | 84.5 | NA |
| P70 | 85:15 | 35 | 65 | NA |
| P74 | 81:19 | 55.5 | 44.5 | NA |
| P83 | 85:15 | 57 | 43 | NA |
| P84 | 87:13 | 55.5 | 44.5 | 13 |
| P85 | 80:20 | 28 | 72 | 14 |
| P107 | 87:13 | 68 | 32 | 11 |
|
| ||||
| P139 | 82:18 | 58 | 42 | NA |
| P143 | 97:3 | 16 | 84 | 18 |
| P144 | 84:16 | 21 | 79 | NA |
| P145 | 81:19 | 30 | 70 | 9 |
| P146 | 80:20 | 73 | 27 | 13 |
| P191 | 89:11 | 49 | 51 | NA |
| P195 | 89:11 | 59.5 | 40.5 | 9 |
|
| ||||
| P220 | 88:12 | 6.73 | 93.27 | NA |
The XCI-AR column shows the results of the AR XCI assay (percentage of inactivation of each allele). The XCI-AS WT and Mut columns show the results of the allele-specific XCI assay (percentage of inactivation of each allele, mean of two replicates n = 2 or three replicates n = 3 in the cases of the deletions). The Global Score column shows the average () score and its standard deviation (SD) in brackets for the patients of our cohort with each mutation. Bold formatting indicates patients with a clinical score lower than the interval µ-σ for the average clinical score of their mutation. n.i. = polymorphism noninformative for the assay. NA = clinical data not available.
Data of patients P109 and P119 with the c.763C > T mutation.
| Sample | XCI-AR | XCI-AS | |
|---|---|---|---|
| WT | Mut | ||
| Frontal Cortex | 65:35 | 26 | 74 |
| Occipital Cortex | 58:42 | 59 | 41 |
| Parietal Cortex | 64:36 | 40 | 60 |
| Temporal Cortex | 60:40 | 32 | 68 |
| White matter | 59:41 | 23 | 77 |
| Brain stem | 59:41 | 31 | 69 |
| Striatum | 61:39 | 51 | 49 |
| Cerebellum | 55:45 | 43 | 57 |
| Blood | 73:27 | 64 | 36 |
| Frontal Cortex | n.i. | 48 | 52 |
| Occipital Cortex | n.i. | NA | NA |
| Parietal Cortex | n.i. | 56 | 44 |
| Temporal Cortex | n.i. | 73 | 27 |
| White matter | n.i. | 46 | 54 |
| Brain stem | n.i. | 38 | 62 |
| Striatum | n.i. | 50 | 50 |
| Cerebellum | n.i. | 50 | 50 |
| Blood | n.i. | 34 | 66 |
The XCI-AR column shows the results of the AR XCI assay (percentage of inactivation of each allele). The XCI-AS WT and Mut columns show the results of the allele-specific XCI assay (percentage of inactivation of each allele). n.i. = polymorphism noninformative for the assay. NA = data not available.
Figure 1Brain RNA Sanger Sequencing. cDNA analysis of brain samples. Electropherograms obtained from Sanger sequencing of frontal and occipital cortex cDNA samples. Blue peaks correspond to the C allele (WT), while red peaks correspond to the T allele (mutated), and the red box highlights the locus of the c.763C > T mutation in heterozygosis. Inactivation ratios are shown as inactivation WT:inactivation Mut.
Figure 2Brain RNA qRT-PCR analysis and comparison with XCI-AS assay results. (a) cDNA analysis of brain samples. The results obtained by qRT-PCR of frontal cortex RNA samples (% of expression of each allele). The discontinuous line indicates 50% of the expression of each allele (each allele is equally present in the sample). (b) Comparison of XCI and qRT-PCR data from patients P109 and P119 with the c.763C > T mutation. Data are shown as % of activation of each X chromosome (% Active) and % RNA expression measured by qRT-PCR.