4.5 Article

Congenital anaemia associated with loss-of-function variants in DNA polymerase epsilon 1

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jmg-2023-109444

Keywords

Pediatrics; Bone Marrow Diseases; Anemia; Genetic Diseases, Inborn; Genomic Instability

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Mutations in the POLE gene have been found to be associated with a rare form of severe congenital transfusion-dependent anemia, characterized by abnormal hematopoiesis and bone marrow dysplasia.
DNA polymerase epsilon (Pol epsilon), a component of the core replisome, is involved in DNA replication. Although genetic defects of Pol epsilon have been reported to cause immunodeficiency syndromes, its role in haematopoiesis remains unknown. Here, we identified compound heterozygous variants (p.[Asp1131fs];[Thr1891del]) in POLE, encoding Pol epsilon catalytic subunit A (POLE1), in siblings with a syndromic form of severe congenital transfusion-dependent anaemia. In contrast to Diamond-Blackfan anaemia, marked reticulocytopenia or marked erythroid hypoplasia was not found. Their bone marrow aspirates during infancy revealed erythroid dysplasia with strongly positive TP53 in immunostaining. Repetitive examinations demonstrated trilineage myelodysplasia within 2 years from birth. They had short stature and facial dysmorphism. HEK293 cell-based expression experiments and analyses of patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) disclosed a reduced mRNA level of Asp1131fs-POLE1 and defective nuclear translocation of Thr1891del-POLE1. Analysis of iPSCs showed compensatory mRNA upregulation of the other replisome components and increase of the TP53 protein, both suggesting dysfunction of the replisome. We created Pole-knockout medaka fish and found that heterozygous fishes were viable, but with decreased RBCs. Our observations expand the phenotypic spectrum of the Pol epsilon defect in humans, additionally providing unique evidence linking Pol epsilon to haematopoiesis.

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