4.7 Article

Bi-allelic TARS Mutations Are Associated with Brittle Hair Phenotype

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 105, Issue 2, Pages 434-440

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.06.017

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Associazione Italiana Ricerca sul Cancro [17710, 21737]
  2. Telethon Foundation [GEP13022]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [340988, 233424]
  4. Dutch Science Organization (NWO) ZonMW division [912.12.132]
  5. H2020 grant (BigMedilytics, big data for medical analysis)
  6. European Research Council (ERC) [340988, 233424] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Brittle and tiger-tail hair is the diagnostic hallmark of trichothiodystrophy (TTD), a rare recessive disease associated with a wide spectrum of clinical features including ichthyosis, intellectual disability, decreased fertility, and short stature. As a result of premature abrogation of terminal differentiation, the hair is brittle and fragile and contains reduced cysteine content. Hypersensitivity to UV light is found in about half of individuals with TTD; all of these individuals harbor bi-allelic mutations in components of the basal transcription factor TFIIH, and these mutations lead to impaired nucleotide excision repair and basal transcription. Different genes have been found to be associated with non-photosensitive YID (NPS-TTD); these include MPLKIP (also called TTDN1), GTF2E2 (also called TFIIE beta), and RNF113A. However, a relatively large group of these individuals with NPS-TTD have remained genetically uncharacterized. Here we present the identification of an NPS-TTD-associated gene, threonyl-tRNA synthetase (TARS), found by next-generation sequencing of a group of uncharacterized individuals with NPS-TTD. One individual has compound heterozygous TARS variants, c.826A>G (p.Lys276Glu) and c.1912C>T (p.Arg638*), whereas a second individual is homozygous for the TARS variant: c.680T>C (p.Leu227Pro). We showed that these variants have a profound effect on TARS protein stability and enzymatic function. Our results expand the spectrum of genes involved in YID to include genes implicated in amino acid charging of tRNA, which is required for the last step in gene expression, namely protein translation. We previously proposed that some of the TTD-specific features derive from subtle transcription defects as a consequence of unstable transcription factors. We now extend the definition of YID from a transcription syndrome to a gene-expression syndrome.

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