| Literature DB >> 31660661 |
Samantha J Bryen1,2, Lisa J Ewans3,4, Jason Pinner3,5, Suzanna C MacLennan6,7, Sandra Donkervoort8, Diana Castro9, Ana Töpf10, Gina O'Grady1,2, Beryl Cummings11,12,13, Katherine R Chao11,12,13, Ben Weisburd11,12,13, Laurent Francioli11,12,13, Fathimath Faiz14, Adam M Bournazos1,2, Ying Hu8, Carla Grosmann15, Denise M Malicki16, Helen Doyle17, Nanna Witting18, John Vissing18, Kristl G Claeys19,20, Kathryn Urankar21, Ana Beleza-Meireles22, Julia Baptista23,24, Sian Ellard23,24, Marco Savarese25, Mridul Johari25, Anna Vihola25, Bjarne Udd25,26, Anirban Majumdar27, Volker Straub10, Carsten G Bönnemann8, Daniel G MacArthur11,12,13, Mark R Davis14, Sandra T Cooper1,2,28.
Abstract
We present eight families with arthrogryposis multiplex congenita and myopathy bearing a TTN intron 213 extended splice-site variant (NM_001267550.1:c.39974-11T>G), inherited in trans with a second pathogenic TTN variant. Muscle-derived RNA studies of three individuals confirmed mis-splicing induced by the c.39974-11T>G variant; in-frame exon 214 skipping or use of a cryptic 3' splice-site effecting a frameshift. Confounding interpretation of pathogenicity is the absence of exons 213-217 within the described skeletal muscle TTN N2A isoform. However, RNA-sequencing from 365 adult human gastrocnemius samples revealed that 56% specimens predominantly include exons 213-217 in TTN transcripts (inclusion rate ≥66%). Further, RNA-sequencing of five fetal muscle samples confirmed that 4/5 specimens predominantly include exons 213-217 (fifth sample inclusion rate 57%). Contractures improved significantly with age for four individuals, which may be linked to decreased expression of pathogenic fetal transcripts. Our study extends emerging evidence supporting a vital developmental role for TTN isoforms containing metatranscript-only exons.Entities:
Keywords: TTN metatranscript-only; alternative splicing; arthrogryposis; congenital titinopathies; intronic splice variant
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31660661 PMCID: PMC7306402 DOI: 10.1002/humu.23938
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878