4.4 Article

A rare sequence variant in intron 1 of THAP1 is associated with primary dystonia

Journal

MOLECULAR GENETICS & GENOMIC MEDICINE
Volume 2, Issue 3, Pages 261-272

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mgg3.67

Keywords

Dystonia; DYT6; intronic variant; minigene assay; THAP1

Funding

  1. NCATS NIH HHS [U54 TR001456] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NINDS NIH HHS [R01 NS069936, R01 NS082296, R01 NS075321, P50 NS072187] Funding Source: Medline

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Although coding variants in THAP1 have been causally associated with primary dystonia, the contribution of noncoding variants remains uncertain. Herein, we examine a previously identified Intron 1 variant (c.71+9C>A, rs200209986). Among 1672 subjects with mainly adult-onset primary dystonia, 12 harbored the variant in contrast to 1/1574 controls (P < 0.01). Dystonia classification included cervical dystonia (N = 3), laryngeal dystonia (adductor subtype, N = 3), jaw-opening oromandibular dystonia (N = 1), blepharospasm (N = 2), and unclassified (N = 3). Age of dystonia onset ranged from 25 to 69 years (mean = 54 years). In comparison to controls with no identified THAP1 sequence variants, the c.71+9C>A variant was associated with an elevated ratio of Isoform 1 (NM_018105) to Isoform 2 (NM_199003) in leukocytes. In silico and minigene analyses indicated that c.71+9C>A alters THAP1 splicing. Lymphoblastoid cells harboring the c.71+9C>A variant showed extensive apoptosis with relatively fewer cells in the G2 phase of the cell cycle. Differentially expressed genes from lymphoblastoid cells revealed that the c.71+9C>A variant exerts effects on DNA synthesis, cell growth and proliferation, cell survival, and cytotoxicity. In aggregate, these data indicate that THAP1 c.71+9C>A is a risk factor for adult-onset primary dystonia.

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