4.5 Article

Dissecting the molecular mechanisms in craniofrontonasal syndrome:: differential mRNA expression of mutant EFNB1 and the cellular mosaic

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 16, Issue 2, Pages 184-191

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201968

Keywords

CFNS; EFNB1; X-inactivation; RT-PCR; premature termination; NMD

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Craniofrontonasal syndrome (CFNS) is an X-linked malformation syndrome with variable phenotype that is caused by mutations in the ephrin-B1 gene (EFNB1). Over 50% of EFNB1 mutations result in premature termination codons that may elicit mRNA degradation by the nonsense-mediated decay pathway. To assess the effects of various mutations at the transcript level, expression of EFNB1 mRNA was studied by RT-PCR in fibroblast cultures established from CFNS female patients. Compared to the wild-type and two missense mutation alleles, severe depletion of transcripts was observed for mutant alleles harbouring either splice site mutation c.407-2A > T at the exon 2/3 boundary or frameshift mutation c.377_384delTCAAGAAG in exon 2. In contrast, escape from mRNA decay was observed for mutation c.614_ 615delCT, which generates a premature termination codon close to the 30-end of the penultimate exon 4 disobeying the '50-55 bp' rule. These results suggest differential degradation of mutant EFNB1 transcripts by the nonsense-mediated mRNA decay pathway. Although the clinical phenotypes of the patients were not highly suggestive of a phenotype-genotype correlation, the two female patients were diagnosed with diaphragmatic hernia harbouring putative ephrin-B1 truncating mutations. Previously, disease manifestation in heterozygous females had been attributed mainly to cellular interference of divergent cell populations expressing wild-type or mutant EFNB1, depending on the pattern of X-inactivation. Upon clonal expansion of patient cells with either the wild-type or mutant EFNB1 on the active X-chromosome, we were able to separate mutant and wild-type EFNB1-expressing cells in vitro, further supporting the concept of cellular interference in CFNS.

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