| Literature DB >> 34677878 |
Raffaele Renella1,2, Katelyn Gagne2, Ellen Beauchamp3, Jonathan Fogel2, Aleksej Perlov2, Mireia Sola4, Thorsten Schlaeger2, Inga Hofmann2,5,6, Akiko Shimamura2, Benjamin L Ebert3,7, Klaus Schmitz-Abe8, Kyriacos Markianos9, Kristi Murphy9, Liang Sun9, Shira Rockowitz9, Piotr Sliz10,11, Dean R Campagna5, Timothy A Springer11, Christopher Bahl2,4, Suneet Agarwal2,7, Mark D Fleming5, David A Williams2,7.
Abstract
Septins play key roles in mammalian cell division and cytokinesis but have not previously been implicated in a germline human disorder. A male infant with severe neutropenia and progressive dysmyelopoiesis with tetraploid myeloid precursors was identified. No known genetic etiologies for neutropenia or bone marrow failure were found. However, next-generation sequencing of germline samples from the patient revealed a novel, de novo germline stop-loss mutation in the X-linked gene SEPT6 that resulted in reduced SEPT6 staining in bone marrow granulocyte precursors and megakaryocytes. Patient skin fibroblast-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) produced reduced myeloid colonies, particularly of the granulocyte lineage. CRISPR/Cas9 knock-in of the patient's mutation or complete knock-out of SEPT6 was not tolerated in non-patient-derived iPSCs or human myeloid cell lines, but SEPT6 knock-out was successful in an erythroid cell line and resulting clones revealed a propensity to multinucleation. In silico analysis predicts that the mutated protein hinders the dimerization of SEPT6 coiled-coils in both parallel and antiparallel arrangements, which could in turn impair filament formation. These data demonstrate a critical role for SEPT6 in chromosomal segregation in myeloid progenitors that can account for the unusual predisposition to aneuploidy and dysmyelopoiesis.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34677878 PMCID: PMC8671325 DOI: 10.1002/ajh.26382
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hematol ISSN: 0361-8609 Impact factor: 10.047