| Literature DB >> 31466347 |
Katharina Wesseler1, Florian Kraft1, Thomas Eggermann2.
Abstract
Silver-Russell and Beckwith-Wiedemann syndromes (SRS, BWS) are rare congenital human disorders characterized by opposite growth disturbances. With the increasing knowledge on the molecular basis of SRS and BWS, it has become obvious that the disorders mirror opposite alterations at the same genomic loci in 11p15.5. In fact, these changes directly or indirectly affect the expression of IGF2 and CDKN1C and their associated pathways, and thereby, cause growth disturbances as key features of both diseases. The increase of knowledge has become possible with the development and implementation of new and comprehensive assays. Whereas, in the beginning molecular testing was restricted to single chromosomal loci, many tests now address numerous loci in the same run, and the diagnostic implementation of (epi)genome wide assays is only a question of time. These high-throughput approaches will be complemented by the analysis of other omic datasets (e.g., transcriptome, metabolome, proteome), and it can be expected that the integration of these data will massively improve the understanding of the pathobiology of imprinting disorders and their diagnostics. Especially long-read sequencing methods, e.g., nanopore sequencing, allowing direct detection of native DNA modification, will strongly contribute to a better understanding of genomic imprinting in the near future. Thereby, new genomic loci and types of pathogenic variants will be identified, resulting in more precise discrimination into different molecular subgroups. These subgroups serve as the basis for (epi)genotype-phenotype correlations, allowing a more directed prognosis, counseling, and therapy. By deciphering the pathophysiological consequences of SRS and BWS and their molecular disturbances, future therapies will be available targeting the basic cause of the disease and respective pathomechanisms and will complement conventional therapeutic strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome; Silver–Russell syndrome; genomic imprinting; therapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31466347 PMCID: PMC6747273 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20174219
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Major clinical features of Silver–Russell syndrome (SRS) and Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome (BWS).
Figure 2The imprinted 11p15.5 regions IC1 and IC2: normal situation and the major molecular alterations detectable in patients with SRS and BWS. (MAT maternal chromosome, red genes expressed from the maternal allele only; PAT paternal chromosome, blue genes expressed from the paternal allele only; grey silent gene copies; arrows indicate expressed allele; filled lollipops indicate methylation).
Molecular findings in patients with Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) or Silver–Russell syndrome (SRS) features.
| Genomic Region | Alteration | BWS/Overgrowth | SRS/Growth Retardation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alterations within imprinted regions | ||||
| 11p15.5: IC1 | GOM | 5%–10% | NR | [ |
| LOM | single cases * | 40%–50% | [ | |
| 11p15.5: IC2 | LOM | 50% (in some patients disturbance of the KCNQ1 transcript) | Single cases * | [ |
| 11p15.5: IC1 and IC2 | Duplication | Maternal: <3% | Paternal: <1% | [ |
| UPD | upd(11)pat: 20% | upd(11)mat: 1 case | [ | |
| 11p15.5: IC1 OR IC2 | Small CNVs ** | Single cases | Single cases | [ |
|
|
| LoF: 5% of sporadic, 40% of familial cases | GoF: single cases | [ |
|
| NR | Familial and rare sporadic cases | [ | |
| Chromosome 7 | UPD | upd(7)pat: 1 case | upd(7)mat: 7%–10% | [ |
| Segmental UPD7q | upd(7q)mat: single patients | [ | ||
| CNVs | Dup 7p13: GRB10 | [ | ||
| Chromosome 6 | UPD | upd(6)pat (TNDM) | upd(6)mat | [ |
| Chromosome 14q32 | Epimutation | MEG3 GOM (KOS14) | MEG3 LOM | [ |
| CNVs ** | Del14q32 (TS14) [ | [ | ||
| UPD | upd(14)mat | [ | ||
| Several imprinted regions | MLID *** | 30% of IC2 LOM | 15%–38% of IC1 LOM | [ |
| Genomic variants in non-imprinted genes *** | ||||
|
| Del | Dup | [ | |
| PIK3 function | [ | |||
LOM—loss of methylation; GOM—gain of methylation; CNV—copy number variation; MLID—multilocus imprinting disturbance; LoF—loss of function; GoF—gain of function; * in these cases clinical features were not convincing for BWS or SRS, respectively; ** CNVs might affect the DMR itself or further non-coding areas which are directly or indirectly involved in the regulation of the imprinted region, e.g., KCNQ1OT1 in IC2; *** in fact, MLID might be caused by pathogenic variants in non-imprinted genes (see text).
Figure 3Interactions between genes pathogenic variants in which have been reported in SRS, BWS or related phenotypes (red letters, associated disorders are indicated). Functional interactions can be observed on expression as well as on physiological levels. Genes depicted in blue boxes are expressed from the paternal allele, whereas in red boxes maternally expressed genes are shown. Promoting interactions are indicated by green lines/arrows, red lines indicate inhibition. The effect of pathogenic variants in these genes/factors, such as over/underexpression, is not shown.