4.5 Article

Isoform-specific NF1 mRNA levels correlate with disease severity in Neurofibromatosis type 1

Journal

ORPHANET JOURNAL OF RARE DISEASES
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13023-019-1223-1

Keywords

NF1; Neurofibromatosis type 1; Alternative splicing; Gene expression; mRNA isoforms; Phenotypic expressivity; Clinical variability

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health
  2. AIRC [IG 21614]

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Background Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is characterized by an extreme clinical variability both within and between families that cannot be explained solely by the nature of the pathogenic NF1 gene mutations. A proposed model hypothesizes that variation in the levels of protein isoforms generated via alternative transcript processing acts as modifier and contributes to phenotypic variability. Results Here we used real-time quantitative PCR to investigate the levels of two major NF1 mRNA isoforms encoding proteins differing in their ability to control RAS signaling (isoforms I and II) in the peripheral blood leukocytes of 138 clinically well-characterized NF1 patients and 138 aged-matched healthy controls. As expected, expression analysis showed that NF1 isoforms I and II levels were significantly lower in patients than controls. Notably, these differences were more evident when patients were stratified according to the severity of phenotype. Moreover, a correlation was identified when comparing the levels of isoform I mRNA and the severity of NF1 features, with statistically significant lower levels associated with a severe phenotype (i.e., occurrence of learning disability/intellectual disability, optic gliomas and/or other neoplasias, and/or cerebrovascular disease) as well as in patients with cognitive impairment. Conclusions The present findings provide preliminary evidence for a role of circuits controlling NF1 transcript processing in modulating NF1 expressivity, and document an association between the levels of neurofibromin isoform I mRNA and the severity of phenotype and cognitive impairment in NF1.

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