Identification and functional characteristics of a novel splicing heterozygote variant of COL2A1 associated with Stickler syndrome type I

Stickler syndrome type I (STL1) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by ocular, auditory, orofacial, and skeletal anomalies. The main causes of STL1 are variants in the gene, which encodes a type II collagen precursor protein. The specific focus of this study was on a newborn from China d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in genetics 2024-07, Vol.15, p.1308737
Hauptverfasser: Gong, Yujing, Zhu, Weijian, Zhu, Mianmian, Chen, Dan, Wu, Sunke, Hu, Sisi, Luo, Yi, Jiang, Yiyi, Zhu, Ting, Wang, Dan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Stickler syndrome type I (STL1) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by ocular, auditory, orofacial, and skeletal anomalies. The main causes of STL1 are variants in the gene, which encodes a type II collagen precursor protein. The specific focus of this study was on a newborn from China diagnosed with STL1, with the aim of providing novel insights into the effects of a newly identified intronic variant in the gene on pre-mRNA splicing. Trio whole exome sequencing was used to identify the causative variant in the family. The identified variant was validated using Sanger sequencing. Bioinformatics programs were used to predict the pathogenicity of the candidate variant. Additionally, an minigene assay was used to investigate the effects of the identified variant on RNA splicing. The proband with STL1 had a novel heterozygous splicing variant in the intron nine acceptor donor site of (c.655-2A>G). This splice junction variant resulted in aberrant mRNA splicing, leading to the skipping of exon 10 and the production of a shorter protein that may lack the last 18 native amino acids. The c.655-2A>G variant in the gene leads to STL1 through abnormal splicing. By expanding the spectrum of variants in the gene, this finding improves the clinical understanding of STL1 and provides guidance for early diagnosis and disease counseling.
ISSN:1664-8021
1664-8021
DOI:10.3389/fgene.2024.1308737