| Literature DB >> 32354341 |
Wenlin Jiao1,2,3,4, Shidou Zhao1,2,3,4, Ran Liu1,2,3,4, Ting Guo5,6,7,8, Yingying Qin9,10,11,12.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI), which is characterized by early menopause before the age of 40 years, affects approximately 1-5% of women. Cytoplasmic polyadenylation element binding protein 1 (CPEB1) is a post-transcriptional regulatory protein that is highly expressed in germ cells and promotes oocytes maturation, and several studies have found microdeletions of chromosome 15q25.2, which contains the CPEB1 gene, in POI patients. However, the deleted region also includes other plausible genes, and thus the contribution of CPEB1 to POI is uncertain. The present study aimed to determine the relationship between CPEB1 deletion and POI in a Chinese cohort.Entities:
Keywords: CPEB1; Meiosis; Microdeletion; POI; Polyadenylation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32354341 PMCID: PMC7193392 DOI: 10.1186/s13048-020-00630-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ovarian Res ISSN: 1757-2215 Impact factor: 4.234
Previous studies of CPEB1 deletions in POI patients
| Case No. | Deletion | Type of amenorrhea | Familial history | Other features | Prevalence | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case 1 | 15q25.2 | Secondary | – | – | 0.33% | Tsuiko et al. |
| Case 2 | 15q25.2 | Primary | – | Behavioral disorders, progressive intellectual deficiency | 1.15% | Hyon et al. |
| Case 3 | 15q25.2 | Secondary | – | – | ||
| Case 4 | 15q25.2 | Primary | Yes | – | ||
| Case 5 | 15q25.2 | Primary | – | – | 1.12% | McGuire et al. |
| Case 6 | 15q25.2 | Primary | Yes | – | 2.9% | Bestetti et al. |
| Case 7 | 15q25.2 | Primary | Yes | – |
Primers for qPCR of CPEB1 and ACTB
| Forward primer | Reverse primer | |
|---|---|---|
| Exon 1 | 5′-AGCGGCTCGTAGGAGCTTCAT-3’ | 5′-TTACCAGCGGGAACGCCAT-3’ |
| Exon 2 | 5′-GATAAAAGATTGCTGGGACAACC-3’ | 5′-CAGATGCCTACCACGTTCAAGT-3’ |
| Exon 3 | 5′-GCTTTTCCCAACCTCTGCG-3’ | 5′-TACCCCAGCCAACTCATTCTC-3’ |
| Exon 4 | 5′-AGTTTCCAGCACCCTCAGTTAG-3’ | 5′-CACAATAATCTCCACTCCTCCC-3’ |
| Exon 5 | 5′-CTTCGCATTTCTCCACCTCTG-3’ | 5′-TGGTTGGGGAGGGAGTGACT- 3’ |
| Exon 6 | 5′-AAGCCACCTGTACCTGGAGTG-3’ | 5′-GCCCCACCCTTCAACTCTTA-3’ |
| Exon 7 | 5′-CTTCTGCCATTCTTTTCTGTCTC-3’ | 5′-GTGCCCACCATGTTACCAAC-3’ |
| Exon 8 | 5′-CTGTCCGATCCTTGCTTCA-3’ | 5′-CCTGCCTATCCACCTACCAC-3’ |
| Exon 9 | 5′-AGGGCGTTAGCTTAGCTTCAG-3’ | 5′-GGCATACACCACTCCACCAA-3’ |
| Exon 10 | 5′-CCAACGGAGTTACCTGAAAGC-3’ | 5′-CGTACAAAGACCAAGCCCAC-3’ |
| Exon 11 | 5′-TGAATCCCAGAGGCATCCAG-3’ | 5′-ACAGAAGAAAGGACCAGGCT-3’ |
| Exon 12 | 5′-TGTAACAAGGATGGTGGGTTTG-3’ | 5′-GTTTGGAGAAGGGTGGGAGAC-3’ |
| ACTB | 5′-ATTCCTATGTGGGCGACGA-3’ | 5′-TGTGGTGCCAGATTTTCTCC-3’ |
Fig. 1Heterozygous deletion of CPEB1 exons 8–12 was identified in one POI patient
Fig. 2The gene structure of CPEB1 and the deletion region identified in the present study