In Rare Disorder, a Familiar Protein Disrupts Gene Function
-Knowledge May Improve Diagnosis for Children with Cornelia deLange Syndrome-
When gene regulation is disrupted in the multisystem genetic disease Cornelia deLange syndrome (CdLS), children may suffer missing hands or fingers, mental retardation, growth failure, cleft palate, heart defects, and other impairments. For families and patients, better knowledge of how those genes perturb normal development may enable researchers to design better diagnostic tests for the disease, and also provide targets for eventual treatments.
The study appeared
First described in 1933, CdLS affects multiple organs and typically results in distinctive facial features, such as thin eyebrows that join, long eyelashes, thin lips, and excessive body hair. It affects an estimated one in 10,000 children. In the past, CdLS was only recognized in its very severe form that was often fatal in childhood; now most children with the condition live into adulthood. CdLS has a wide range of severity, with the mildest form manifesting as apparent isolated mental retardation and/or autism.
Krantz and colleagues investigated cohesin, a protein complex consisting of at least four proteins that form a ring that encircles chromosomes during cell division. Cohesin’s long-established role, called “canonical” by the authors, is to control chromatids — the long strands that chromosomes form when they copy their DNA.
However, said Krantz, one open question in biology has been, “What does cohesin do when cells are not dividing?” His team’s paper provides part of the answer, as the first study in human cells to identify genes that are dysregulated when cohesin doesn’t work properly. Cohesin’s role in dysregulation of gene expression (regulating the degree to which specific genes are turned on or off) has attracted considerable scientific interest with a recent discovery that it may also be implicated in cancer.
The current study builds on previous work by Krantz, who in 2004 co-led the study that discovered NIPBL, the first gene known to cause CdLS. Krantz partnered with his long-time collaborator, Laird S. Jackson, M.D., of
In the current study, Krantz did a genome-wide analysis of mutant cell lines from 16 patients with severe CdLS. All the cells had mutations in the NIPBL gene, which plays a role in moving cohesin onto and off chromosomes.
The researchers used DNA microarrays, manufactured chips that measure how strongly different genes are expressed throughout a cell’s full complement of DNA. The study team identified hundreds of genes that were dysregulated compared to controls, and also detected gene expression profiles that were unique to CdLS. Importantly, said Krantz, the expression levels of genes corresponded to the severity of the disease. The team replicated its findings in 101 additional samples.
“We found that gene expression is exquisitely regulated by cohesin and the NIBPL gene,” said Krantz. “The gene expression patterns we found have great potential to be used in a diagnostic tool for
Funding for the study came from the National Institute of Child Health and Development of the National Institutes of Health, the Pennsylvania Department of Health, the Genome Network Project and Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the MEXT, a Japanese government ministry. First author
Krantz’s co-authors on the study came from Children’s Hospital; the
Liu et al, “Transcriptional dysregulation in NIPBL and cohesin mutant human cells,” PloS Biology, published online,
About The Children’s Hospital of
CONTACT: John Ascenzi
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Ascenzi@email.chop.edu
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