| Literature DB >> 32117416 |
Qiumei Du1, M Teresa de la Morena2, Nicolai S C van Oers1.
Abstract
Chromosome 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11.2del) is a complex, multi-organ disorder noted for its varying severity and penetrance among those affected. The clinical problems comprise congenital malformations; cardiac problems including outflow tract defects, hypoplasia of the thymus, hypoparathyroidism, and/or dysmorphic facial features. Additional clinical issues that can appear over time are autoimmunity, renal insufficiency, developmental delay, malignancy and neurological manifestations such as schizophrenia. The majority of individuals with 22q11.2del have a 3 Mb deletion of DNA on chromosome 22, leading to a haploinsufficiency of ~106 genes, which comprise coding RNAs, noncoding RNAs, and pseudogenes. The consequent haploinsufficiency of many of the coding genes are well described, including the key roles of T-box Transcription Factor 1 (TBX1) and DiGeorge Critical Region 8 (DGCR8) in the clinical phenotypes. However, the haploinsufficiency of these genes alone cannot account for the tremendous variation in the severity and penetrance of the clinical complications among those affected. Recent RNA and DNA sequencing approaches are uncovering novel genetic and epigenetic differences among 22q11.2del patients that can influence disease severity. In this review, the role of coding and non-coding genes, including microRNAs (miRNA) and long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), will be discussed in relation to their bearing on 22q11.2del with an emphasis on TBX1.Entities:
Keywords: 22q11.2 deletion syndrome; DiGeorge syndrome; TBX1; epigenetics; haploinsufficiency; microRNAs; noncoding RNAs
Year: 2020 PMID: 32117416 PMCID: PMC7016268 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2019.01365
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Clinical manifestations of 22q11.2 and 22q11.2-like deletion syndromes.
| Chromosomal regions affected | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 22q11.2 | 10p14-13 | 4q34.1-q35.2 | 3p10.3 | |
| Frequency | 1/4000 | >100 individuals | rare | rare |
| Length of DNA deletion | 3 Mb or 1.5 Mb | 5 Mb | 17.4 Mb | 300 kb |
|
| % occurrence | |||
| Congenital heart disease (CHD) | 75% | 82% | 15% | yes |
| Immune deficiency (thymic hypoplasia) | 50–70% | 17% | nr | yes |
| Hypocalcemia (hypoparathyroidism) | 35% | 22% | nr | yes |
| Dysmorphic craniofacial features | 50% | 50% | 95-99% | yes |
| Developmental delay | 50% | 80-90% | 10% | yes |
| Renal anomalies | 14% | 5% | nr | yes |
| Skeletal defects | 60% | nr | 55% | nr |
| Learning problems | 70% | 80-99% | 65% | yes |
| Psychiatric disorders | 30% | nr | nr | nr |
| Gastrointestinal abnormalities | 30% | nr | nr | nr |
| Digital malformations (polydactyly) | 30% | 30-80% | 88% | nr |
CHD includes interrupted aortic arches, Tetralogy of Fallot, right subclavian artery defects, ventricular septal defects, pulmonary atresia, and other outflow tract anomalies.
Immune deficiency is defined with peripheral T cell counts less than 1500 cells/µl.
Psychiatric disorders can include autism, schizophrenia, seizure disorder.
nr, not reported.
Figure 1Genetic organization of the human chromosome 22q11.2 locus and synteny on murine chromosome 16. Human chromosome 22 is approximately 51 million base pairs. The region affected by the 22q11.2 chromosomal deletions and duplications spans approximately 4 Mb, with 8 low copy repeats (LCR A-LCR H) causal to this distributed throughout this region. LCR A-LCR D are shown. Recombination of these highly homologous sequences (also called segmental duplications) results in proximal, central, and distal (not shown) deletions affecting both coding and noncoding DNA segments. The proximal deletions are responsible for the classic clinical features of 22q11.2del, which includes DiGeorge syndrome. The location of the coding genes, and noncoding RNAs including miRNAs and lncRNAs, are shown for the proximal region of chromosome 22q11.2. The corresponding genes on the murine locus are connected with lines, which reveals a flipping of the locus and a break containing distinct genes. Three of the more commonly used mouse models of 22q11.2del that replicate many clinical features of 22q11.2del are shown, named as the Df16(A), Df1 and Lgdel lines.
Genetic and epigenetic modifiers of 22q11.2 deletion syndrome with disease connections.
| Gene name | Chromosome Location | Function | Human syndromes | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genes on chromosome 22q11.2 | ||||
|
| 22q11.2 | T-box transcription factor regulates expression of 2000 genes | 22q11.2del | Interacts with histone3 methyltransferases, BAF60a, and SMAD1 |
|
| 22q11.2 | MicroRNA binding protein | 22q11.2del | Epigenetically regulates gene expression through miRNAs |
|
| 22q11.2 | Regulates neural crest migration | CHDb (with PRODH deletion) | Negatively regulates |
| Morphogens | ||||
| Retinoic acid | – | Morphogen involved in embryonic patterning | 22q11.2del-like | Complexes retinoic acid receptor to regulate gene expression |
| Gestational | – | Teratogen during pregnancy | 22q11.2del-like | Affects multiple developmental processes in the embryo, with the pharyngeal apparatus particularly sensitive |
| Genes at other chromosomal locations | ||||
|
| 7q36.1 | Histone methyltransferase | Kleefstra syndrome 2 | Interacts with TBX1 and mono-methylates lysine 27 on histone 3 |
|
| 12q13.2 | Component of the SWI-SNF chromatin remodeling complex | – | Component of a chromosome remodeling complex that interacts with TBX1 |
|
| 8p11.21 | Histone acetyl transferase | CHD | positively regulated by RA and, in turn affects TBX1 expression |
|
| 4q31.21 | Signaling protein downstream of Bmp4 | Interacts with TBX1, which antagonizes its association with SMAD4 | |
|
| 10q21.3 | Histone demethylase | Rett syndrome and intellectual | Demethylates lysine residues on histones |
|
| 3q11.2 | Lysine-Specific Demethylase and Histidyl-Hydroxylase | Preeclampsia | Demethylates lysine residues on histones |
|
| 7q34 | Lysine demethylase | – | Demethylates lysine residues on histones |
|
| 6p24.3 | Zn finger transcription factor | – | Regulates RAS-responsive elements |
|
| 10q22.2 | Coat Protein II complex | – | Involved in protein export from ER to Golgi |
|
| 12p13.31 | Glucose transporter | - | High affinity interaction with glucose to translocate across the membrane |
|
| 17q21.31 | Histone modification | Koolen-De Vries syndrome | Nuclear protein forming part of a complex that has histone acetyltransferase activity |
|
| 20p11.22 | Transcription factor | Octofaciocervical syndrome | Regulates embryonic tissue patterning |
|
| 6p21.1 | Vascular endothelial growth factor | Tetralogy of Fallot | Vascular endothelial growth factor supports cell growth |
|
| 10q24.32 | Fibroblast growth factor | Hypogonadotropic hypogonadism 6 | Fibroblast growth factor supports cell growth |
|
| 4q12 | Platelet derived growth factor receptor | – | Regulates neural crest cell development |
|
| 7q36.3 | Sonic hedgehog protein | Holoprosencephaly 3, Microphthalmia with coloboma 5 | Regulates Tbx1 expression and vertebrate organogenesis |
Human chromosomal location.
Congenital heart disease.
Figure 2Molecular pathways intersecting with TBX1 with the potential to modulate the clinical severity and penetrance of 22q11.2del. The expression of TBX1, a key gene coupled to the patterning of the pharyngeal apparatus, is positively regulated by members of the Fox-family of transcription factors and MOZ. Negative regulators of TBX1 include the defined teratogens, retinoic acid (RA), gestational diabetes, and miR-96 and miR-451a, the latter two miRNAs that target the 3' untranslated region of TBX1, resulting in its degradation. While most TBX1 resides in the nucleus, wherein it can regulate gene expression, a fraction of TBX1 is localized in the cytosol, where it negatively impacts bone morphogenic protein signaling via a complex with SMAD4.
Epigenetic modifiers of 22q11.2 locus: Noncoding RNA regulators and noncoding RNAs.
| Type of RNA | RNA transcript affected | Location on 22q11.2 | Murine Homologs | Confirmed targets | Tissue Expression | Pathways affected |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Modifiers Encoded within 22q11.2del | ||||||
| Coding |
| Between LCRA-B |
| Global mRNAs | Ubiquitous | miRNA biogenesis |
| MiRNAs (7) | miR-185 | Between LCRA-B | miR-185 |
| Thymus, brain, | T and B cell signaling, cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, calcium responses |
| miR-4761 | Between LCRA-B | none | – | brain | Predicted: Dopamine metabolism and neurotransmitter clearance | |
| miR-3618 | Between LCRA-B | none | – | Ubiquitous | Predicted: RNA capping | |
| miR-1306 | Between LCRA-B | miR-1306 |
| Ubiquitous | Predicted: mRNA capping and gene expression | |
| miR-6816 | Between LCRA-B | none | – | Not determined | unknown | |
| miR-1286 | Within LCRB | Only in primates | – | Cerebellum | unknown | |
| miR-649 | Within LCRD | miR-649 |
| Oral mucosa, | HSV infection susceptibility | |
| RNA transcript affected | Location on 22q11.2 | Highest RPKM (tissue sites) | Dominant Sites of Tissue Expression | Function | ||
| LncRNAs (12) | DGCR5 | Within LCRA | 40 (cerebellum, cortex) | Brain, pancreas, pituitary | Targets miR-1180, miR-23b | |
| DGCR9 | Within LCRA-B | 25 (cerebellum) | Brain, pituitary | Cell proliferation and glucose uptake | ||
| DGCR11 | Within LCRA-B | 1 (Skin) | Brain, skin, blood | Within DGCR2 | ||
| AC004471.10 | Between LCRA-B | 4 (testes) | Brain, muscle, skin, testes | Protein homolog TSSK2 | ||
| LINC01311 | Between LCRA-B | 2.4 (brain, testes) | Ubiquitous | To be determined | ||
| AC000067.2 | Between LCRA-B | 0.1 (brain) | Arteries, brain | To be determined | ||
| LINC00895 | Between LCRA-B | Not reported | Ubiquitous | To be determined | ||
| LINC00896 | Between LCRA-B | 3.3 (thyroid, pituitary) | Pituitary, thyroid | Regulated by miR-139 | ||
| XXbac-B444P24.14 | Within LCRB | 0.8 (pituitary, thyroid) | Ubiquitous | To be determined | ||
| XXbac-B33L19.4 | Within LCRB | 1 (testes) | Testes | To be determined | ||
| XXbac-B135H6.18 | Between LCRC-D | 3 (pituitary) | Brain, muscle, pituitary | To be determined | ||
| KB1592A4.15 | Within LCRD | 40 (testes) | Testes | To be determined | ||
| SnoRNAs (2) | SNORA15 | Between LCRA-B | 0.2 | Nucleolus | Nucleolar RNA guide for modifying uridine | |
| SNORA77 | Between LCRA-B | 5 (brain) 7 (testes) | Nucleolus | Guide for modifying uridine on 18S rRNA | ||
| Modifiers Encoded outside the 22q11.2del locus | ||||||
| Type of RNA | RNA transcript affected | Location | Murine Homologs | Confirmed targets | Tissue expression | Pathways affected |
| MiRNAs | miR-96a | chr7:129774692-129774769 | miR-96a |
| Sensory organs, inner ear, eye, nose | Cilia and hearing |
| miR-451a | chr17:28861369-28861400 | miR-451a |
| ubiquitous | Wound healing and cellular differentiation | |
Read count extremely low in miRbase data set with confirmed biological functions lacking.
Confirmed targets primarily based on luciferase reporter assays.
information from published reports, miRNA prediction programs, and Ingenuity Pathway analyses.
Obtained from uscs genome browser.
MiR-1286 only present in humans, orangutans, gorillas, and chimpanzees.