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RESEARCH PRODUCT
A familial disorder of altered DNA-methylation
Jasmin BeygoJulia RichterEva JüttnerBernhard HorsthemkeI. Karen TempleBernhard KornReiner SiebertLarissa SeidmannSusanne BensDeborah J G MackayOle AmmerpohlInga VaterNeil J. SebireAlmuth CaliebeKarin BuitingConstantin Von KaisenbergAndrea HaakeJosé I. Martín-suberoDeniz KanberInga Nagelsubject
EpigenomicsMaleGeneticsSanger sequencingDNA Mutational AnalysisGenetic Diseases InbornInfant NewbornMedizinDNA MethylationBiologyPedigreesymbols.namesakeDNA methylationGeneticssymbolsHumansFemaleEpigeneticsImprinting (psychology)Genomic imprintingGeneAllelesGenetics (clinical)Exome sequencingEpigenomicsdescription
BackgroundIn a subset of imprinting disorders caused by epimutations, multiple imprinted loci are affected. Familial occurrence of multilocus imprinting disorders is rare.Purpose/objectiveWe have investigated the clinical and molecular features of a familial DNA-methylation disorder.MethodsTissues of affected individuals and blood samples of family members were investigated by conventional and molecular karyotyping. Sanger sequencing and RT-PCR of imprinting-associated genes (NLRP2, NLRP7, ZFP57, KHDC3L, DNMT1o), exome sequencing and locus-specific, array-based and genome-wide technologies to determine DNA-methylation were performed.ResultsIn three offspring of a healthy couple, we observed prenatal onset of severe growth retardation and dysmorphism associated with altered DNA-methylation at paternally and maternally imprinted loci. Array-based analyses in various tissues of the offspring identified the DNA-methylation of 2.1% of the genes in the genome to be recurrently altered. Despite significant enrichment of imprinted genes (OR 9.49), altered DNA-methylation predominately (90.2%) affected genes not known to be imprinted. Sequencing of genes known to cause comparable conditions and exome sequencing in affected individuals and their ancestors did not unambiguously point to a causative gene.ConclusionsThe family presented herein suggests the existence of a familial disorder of DNA-methylation affecting imprinted but also not imprinted gene loci potentially caused by a maternal effect mutation in a hitherto not identified gene.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-04-10 |