| Literature DB >> 31877959 |
Hsiang-Yu Lin1,2,3,4,5,6, Ru-Yi Tu1, Schu-Rern Chern1, Yun-Ting Lo6, Sisca Fran1, Fang-Jie Wei1, Sung-Fa Huang7, Shin-Yu Tsai6, Ya-Hui Chang6, Chung-Lin Lee8,9, Shuan-Pei Lin1,2,3,4,6,10, Chih-Kuang Chuang1,11.
Abstract
Hunter syndrome (mucopolysaccharidosis II; MPS II) is caused by a defect of the iduronate-2-sulfatase (IDS) gene. Few studies have reported integrated mutation data of Taiwanese MPS II phenotypes. In this study, we summarized genotype and phenotype correlations of confirmed MPS II patients and asymptomatic MPS II infants in Taiwan. Regular polymerase chain reaction and DNA sequencing were used to identify genetic abnormalities of 191 cases, including 51 unrelated patients with confirmed MPS II and 140 asymptomatic infants. IDS activity was analyzed in individual novel IDS variants using in vitro expression studies. Nineteen novel mutations were identified, in which the percentages of IDS activity of the novel missense mutations c.137A>C, c.311A>T, c.454A>C, c.797C>G, c.817C>T, c.998C>T, c.1106C>G, c.1400C>T, c.1402C>T, and c.1403G>A were significantly decreased (p < 0.001), c.254C>T and c.1025A>G were moderately decreased (p < 0.01), and c.851C>T was slightly decreased (p < 0.05) comparing with normal enzyme activity. The activities of the other six missense mutations were reduced but were insignificant. The results of genomic studies and their phenotypes were highly correlated. A greater understanding of the positive correlations may help to prevent the irreversible manifestations of Hunter syndrome, particularly in infants suspected of having asymptomatic MPS II. In addition, urinary glycosaminoglycan assay is important to diagnose Hunter syndrome since gene mutations are not definitive (could be non-pathogenic).Entities:
Keywords: COS-7 cell transfection; Hunter syndrome; IDS enzyme activity; genotype–phenotype correlation.; iduronate-2-sulfatase (IDS) gene; mucopolysaccharidosis II (MPS II)
Mesh:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31877959 PMCID: PMC6982257 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21010114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Mutations of the iduronate-2-sulfatase (IDS) gene underlying Taiwanese Hunter syndrome by sequencing analysis.
| No. | Missense Nucleotide Alteration | Protein Alteration | Gene Location | Phenotype Severity | IDS Activity | uGAG Tests | Known/ | ACMG Classification |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | c.137A>C | p.D46A | Exon 2 | S | 0.1 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 2 | c.142C>T | p.R48C | Exon 2 | #NBS | 16.27 | Negative | Novel | Likely Pathogenic |
| 3 | c.189T>G | p.N63K | Exon 2 | S | 0.21 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 4 | c.253 G>A | p.A85T | Exon 3 | A | 0.00 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 5 | c.254C>T | p.A85V | Exon 3 | #NBS | 0.83 | Positive | Novel | Likely Pathogenic |
| 6 | c.262C>T | p.R88C | Exon 3 | S | 0.43 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 7 | c.301C>T | p.R101C | Exon 3 | #NBS | 15.4-40.8 | Negative | Known [ | Benign |
| 8 | c.311A>T | p.D104V | Exon 3 | #NBS | 0.32 | Positive | Novel | Likely Pathogenic |
| 9 | c.413A>G | p.H138R | Exon 3 | S | 0.18 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 10 | c.454A>C | p.S152R | Exon 4 | S | 0.11 | Positive | Novel | Likely Pathogenic |
| 11 | c.589C>T | p.P197S | Exon 5 | #NBS | 7.8 | Negative | Novel | Likely Pathogenic |
| 12 | c.683C>T | p.P228L | Exon 5 | A | 0.56 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 13 | c.697A>G | p.R233G | Exon 5 | A | 0.71 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 14 | c.778C>T | p.P260S | Exon 6 | #NBS | 6.47 | Negative | Novel | Likely Pathogenic |
| 15 | c.797C>G | p.P266R | Exon 6 | A | 1.96 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 16 | c.801 G>T | p.W267C | Exon 6 | A | 0.89 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 17 | c.817C>T | p.R273W | Exon 6 | #NBS | 0.2 | Positive | Novel | Likely Pathogenic |
| 18 | c.851C>T | p.P284L | Exon 6 | #NBS (A) | 0.51 | Negative | Known [ | Uncertain Significance |
| 19 | c.890G>A | p.R297H | Exon 7 | #NBS | 9.2 | Negative | Novel | Likely Pathogenic |
| 20 | c.998C>T | p.S333L | Exon 7 | S | 0.34 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 21 | c.1025A>G | p.H342R | Exon 8 | #NBS | 0.4 | Positive | Novel | Likely Pathogenic |
| 22 | c.1039A>G | p.K347E | Exon 8 | S | 0.49 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 23 | c.1400C>T | p.P467L | Exon 9 | #NBS | 0.27 | Positive | Known [ | Likely Pathogenic |
| 24 | c.1402C>T | p.R468W | Exon 9 | S | 0.04 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 25 | c.1403G>A | p.R468Q | Exon 9 | S | 0.00 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 26 | c.1454T>G | p.I485R | Exon 9 | S | 0.16 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 27 | c.1466G>A | p.G489D | Exon 9 | S | 0.11 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 28 | c.1478G>A | p.R493H | Exon 9 | #NBS | 8.82–124.91 | Negative | Novel | Likely Pathogenic |
| 29 | c.1478G>C | p.R493P | Exon 9 | S | 0.13 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 30 | c.1499C>T | p.T500I | Exon 9 | #NBS | 13.2–34.5 | Negative | Novel | Benign |
| 31 | c.1513T>C | p.P505L | Exon 9 | #NBS | 5.93 | Negative | Novel | Likely Pathogenic |
| 32 | c.1600A>C | p.N534H | Exon 9 | A | 1.09 | Positive | Known [ | |
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| 1 | c.801G>A | p.W267X | Exon 6 | S | 0.15 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 2 | c.1106C>G | p.S369X | Exon 7 | A | 0.1 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 3 | c.1561G>T | p.E521X | Exon 9 | S | 0.24 | Positive | Known [ | |
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| 1 | c.684A>G | p.Pro228 = | Exon 5 | #NBS | NA | NA | Novel | Benign |
| 2 | c.1122 C>T | p.Gly374 = | Exon 8 | A | 0.34–7.1 | Positive | Known [ | |
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| 1 | c.103 + 34_56dup | Intron 1 | #NBS | 0.56–14.69 | Negative | Novel | Uncertain Significance | |
| 2 | c.240 + 1G>C | False splicing; deletion of 105 AAs | Intron 2 | S | 0.68 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 3 | c.708 + 2T>G | − | Intron 5 | S | 0.48 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 4 | c.880-2A>T | − | Intron 7 | A | 0.75 | Positive | Novel | Pathogenic |
| 5 | c.1006 + 5G>C | Splicing in 22 nucleotide | Intron 7 | A | 0.05 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 6 | c.1180 + 184T>C | − | Intron 8 | #NBS | NA | NA | Novel | |
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| 1 | c.231_236delCTTTGC | Loss of F78 and A79 | Exon 2 | S | 0.12 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 2 | c.1055del12 | Loss of V353-H356 | Exon 8 | S | 0.25 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 3 | c.1184delG | Frame shift, 44 altered AAs, term | Exon 9 | S | 0.19 | Positive | Known [ | |
| 4 | c.1421delAG | Frame shift, 7 altered AAs, term | Exon 9 | S | 0.34 | Positive | Known [ | |
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| 1 | Exon 4–7 deletion | NA | A | 0.3 | Positive | Known [ | ||
| 2. | c.1007-1666_c.1180 + 2113 delinsTT | NA | #NBS | 0.99 | Positive | Known [ | Pathogenic | |
| 3 | Exon 8 deletion | NA | A | 0.64 | Positive | Known [ | ||
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| 1 | NA | A | 0.13–1.54 | Positive | Known [ |
A combination of four mutations, including c.103 + 34_56dup, c.851C>T; p.P284L, c.1180 + 184T>C, and c.684A>G; p.Pro228 =. # NBS is the abbreviation of newborn screening; S: Severe; A: Attenuated.
Figure 1Mutations of the iduronate-2-sulfatase (IDS) gene underlying Taiwanese Hunter syndrome. A total of 51 mutations of the IDS gene underlying Taiwanese Hunter syndrome were found, in those 35 have been reported previously (red lines with arrows) and the other 16 were novel mutations (green lines with arrows).
Figure 2Scheme for generating a delins c.1007-1666_c.1180 + 2113delinsTT between intron 7 and intron 8. (A): Scheme for generating a delins c.1007-1666_c.1180 + 2113delinsTT between intron 7 and intron 8, leading to the loss of exon 8 in open reading frames. PCR using a primer pair flanking the delins site was used to detect this mutation in one infant and the carrier mother. Lanes M, wild-type, infant, and mom, corresponding to DNA size markers, wild type control, infant, and the mother. (B): Electropherogram showing the sequences of PCR products flanking the breakpoint created in this delins; note a dinucleotide TT insertion is shadowed.
Figure 3Scheme for generating a complex inversion in the IDS gene and IDS-2 pseudogene. The created inversions were identified by PCR. (A): The supposed folding structure was formed by homologous sequences (twill line boxes) in the IDS gene and IDS-2 pseudogene. The rearrangement of the IDS gene was inverted from the homolog in intron 7 to the homolog in distal IDS-2-LINC00893 region. (B): Three sets of primer pairs, as illustrated in Figure A that flanked the breakpoints of recombination were used; the lengths of the amplified fragments of created inversions were 1.9 kb in IDS-2, and 1.8 kb in IDS. PCR products of the affected infant and mother were resolved by electrophoresis, lanes 565, 566, P, Wt, NTC, and M, corresponding to the infant, mother, positive control, wild-type control, template control, and 100 bp ladder DNA size marker.
Figure 4The percentages of IDS activity expressed in transfected COS-7 cells of individual novel missense mutations (n = 17), and previously reported missense mutation (n = 2). A p-value < 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant (*); p-value < 0.01 was considered to be highly significant (**); and a p-value < 0.001 was considered to be extremely significant (***).
Mutations of the iduronate-2-sulfatase (IDS) gene found in suspected MPS II infants referred from newborn screening program for MPS in Taiwan.
| No. | Missense | Ages (Ms) of the Test | Ages (Yrs) at last Follow up | (a)Leukocyte IDS Activity | (b)uGAG Tests | DMB/Cre Ratio | uDS | uHS | ACMG Classification |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | c.142C>T; p.R48C | 1.7 | 0.3 | 16.27 | Negative | 38.73 | 0.01 | 0.75 | Likely Pathogenic |
| 2 | c.254C>T; p.A85V | 4.6 | 0.5 | 0.83 | Positive | 78.58 | 11.59 | 12.36 | Likely Pathogenic |
| 3 | c.301C>T; p.R101C | 1.7 | 3.4 | 15.4–40.8 | Negative | 5.07 | 0.2 | 0.13 | Benign |
| 4 | c.311A>T; p.D104V | 0.9 | 0.3 | 0.32 | Positive | 44.6 | 45.95 | 11.43 | Likely Pathogenic |
| 5 | c.589C>T; p.P197S | 1.9 | 3 | 7.80 | Negative | 63.82 | 0.38 | 1.46 | Likely Pathogenic |
| 6 | c.778C>T; p.P260S | 2.3 | 1 | 6.47 | Negative | 12.29 | 0.12 | 0.1 | Likely Pathogenic |
| 7 | c.817C>T; p.R273W | 0.9 | 0.7 | 0.20 | Positive | 65.06 | 15.78 | 16.23 | Likely Pathogenic |
| 8 | c.851C>T; p.P284L | 1.8 | 1.3 | 0.51 | Negative | 34.22 | 0.03 | 0.08 | Uncertain Significance |
| 9 | c.890G>A; p.R297H | 3 | 0.5 | 9.20 | Negative | 69.67 | 0.08 | 0.04 | Likely Pathogenic |
| 10 | c.1025A>G; p.H342R | 1.6 | 0.3 | 0.40 | Positive | 70.90 | 21.21 | 12.06 | Likely Pathogenic |
| 11 | c.1400C>T; p.P467L | 1.9 | 0.7 | 0.27 | Positive | 153.16 | 21.4 | 30.01 | Likely Pathogenic |
| 12 | c.1478G>A; p.R493H | 1.6 | 3.2 | 26.37 ± 10.98 | Negative | 40.18 | 0.04 | 0.09 | Likely Pathogenic |
| 13 | c.1499C>T; p.T500I | 1.6 | 1.9 | 17.15 ± 3.69 | Negative | 26.11 | 0.1 | 0.27 | Benign |
| 14 | c.1513T>C; p.P505L | 1.4 | 0.5 | 5.93 | Negative | 32.15 | 0.08 | 0.11 | Likely Pathogenic |
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| 15 | * c.103 + 34_56dup | 1.1 | 3.8 | 3.86 ± 2.24 | Negative | 41.15 | 0.06 | 0.11 | Uncertain Significance |
| 16 | c.1180 + 184T>C | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | |||
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| 17 | c.1007-1666_c.1180 + 2113 delinsTT (including exon 8 del) | 1.2 | 1.2 | 0.99 | Positive | 177.96 | 30.77 | 203.35 | Pathogenic |
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| 18 | 1.5 | 0.3 | 0.13 | Positive | 44.05 | 8.72 | 37.30 |
(a) IDS enzyme activity (Ref. 12.89 ~ 131.83 μmol/g protein/4 h); (b) GAG tests including GAG quantification (DMB/Cre ratio): Reference values 39.9 ± 13.1 mg/mmol creatinine (< 6 months), 44.6 ± 23.7 (under 2 years old), 15.3 ± 13.0 (2–17 years old), 5.2 ± 2.5 (18–42 years old); 2-dimensional electrophoresis: Showing DS and HS patterns rather than CS; and the quantitative analyses of GAG-derived disaccharides (DS and HS) using tandem mass spectrometry assay (MS/MS-based method), cut-off values: < 0.80 μg/mL for DS; < 0.78 μg/mL for HS. *A combination of four mutations, including c.103 + 34_56dup, c.851C>T; p.P284L, c.1180 + 184T>C, and c.684A>G; p.Pro228 = (n = 99).
Figure 53D structure analysis by simulating six missense residues, i.e., c.253G>A (p.A85T), c.262C>T (p.R88C), c.311A>T (p.D104V), c.817C>T (p.R273W), c.851C>T (p.P284L), and c.1402C>T (p.R468W), was performed using SWISS-MODEL. The location and the residues of A85T and P284L may have had less influence on the structure of IDS protein and its function and were considered to cause the attenuated phenotype. The altered residues that may have strongly influenced the confirmation of the active site on IDS protein were identified by 3D structure analysis, i.e., R88C, D104V, R273W, and D104V variants may have been pathogenic variations for the severe phenotype of Hunter syndrome.