4.5 Article

Imprinted expression of UBE3A in non-neuronal cells from a PraderWilli syndrome patient with an atypical deletion

Journal

HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS
Volume 23, Issue 9, Pages 2364-2373

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddt628

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01HD068730]
  2. Foundation for Prader-Willi Syndrome
  3. Connecticut Stem Cell Research Grant [11SCA01, 12SCBUCHC]
  4. Raymond and Beverly Sackler Foundation

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PraderWilli syndrome (PWS) and Angelman syndrome (AS) are two neurodevelopmental disorders most often caused by deletions of the same region of paternally inherited and maternally inherited human chromosome 15q, respectively. AS is a single gene disorder, caused by the loss of function of the ubiquitin ligase E3A (UBE3A) gene, while PWS is still considered a contiguous gene disorder. Rare individuals with PWS who carry atypical microdeletions on chromosome 15q have narrowed the critical region for this disorder to a 108 kb region that includes the SNORD116 snoRNA cluster and the Imprinted in PraderWilli (IPW) non-coding RNA. Here we report the derivation of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from a PWS patient with an atypical microdeletion that spans the PWS critical region. We show that these iPSCs express brain-specific portions of the transcripts driven by the PWS imprinting center, including the UBE3A antisense transcript (UBE3A-ATS). Furthermore, UBE3A expression is imprinted in most of these iPSCs. These data suggest that UBE3A imprinting in neurons only requires UBE3A-ATS expression, and no other neuron-specific factors. These data also suggest that a boundary element lying within the PWS critical region prevents UBE3A-ATS expression in non-neural tissues.

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