A Genotype-Phenotype Study of High-Resolution FMR1 Nucleic Acid and Protein Analyses in Fragile X Patients with Neurobehavioral Assessments

Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is caused by silencing of the gene, which encodes a protein with a critical role in synaptic plasticity. The molecular abnormality underlying silencing, CGG repeat expansion, is well characterized; however, delineation of the pathway from DNA to RNA to protein using biosampl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain sciences 2020-10, Vol.10 (10), p.1
Hauptverfasser: Budimirovic, Dejan B, Schlageter, Annette, Filipovic-Sadic, Stela, Protic, Dragana D, Bram, Eran, Mahone, E Mark, Nicholson, Kimberly, Culp, Kristen, Javanmardi, Kamyab, Kemppainen, Jon, Hadd, Andrew, Sharp, Kevin, Adayev, Tatyana, LaFauci, Giuseppe, Dobkin, Carl, Zhou, Lili, Brown, William Ted, Berry-Kravis, Elizabeth, Kaufmann, Walter E, Latham, Gary J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is caused by silencing of the gene, which encodes a protein with a critical role in synaptic plasticity. The molecular abnormality underlying silencing, CGG repeat expansion, is well characterized; however, delineation of the pathway from DNA to RNA to protein using biosamples from well characterized patients with FXS is limited. Since FXS is a common and prototypical genetic disorder associated with intellectual disability (ID) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD), a comprehensive assessment of the DNA-RNA-protein pathway and its correlations with the neurobehavioral phenotype is a priority. We applied nine sensitive and quantitative assays evaluating DNA, RNA, and FMRP parameters to a reference set of cell lines representing the range of expansions. We then used the most informative of these assays on blood and buccal specimens from cohorts of patients with different expansions, with emphasis on those with FXS (N = 42 total, N = 31 with FMRP measurements). The group with FMRP data was also evaluated comprehensively in terms of its neurobehavioral profile, which allowed molecular-neurobehavioral correlations. CGG repeat expansions, methylation levels, and FMRP levels, in both cell lines and blood samples, were consistent with findings of previous genomic and protein studies. They also demonstrated a high level of agreement between blood and buccal specimens. These assays further corroborated previous reports of the relatively high prevalence of methylation mosaicism (slightly over 50% of the samples). Molecular-neurobehavioral correlations confirmed the inverse relationship between overall severity of the FXS phenotype and decrease in FMRP levels (N = 26 males, mean 4.2 ± 3.3 pg FMRP/ng genomic DNA). Other intriguing findings included a significant relationship between the diagnosis of FXS with ASD and two-fold lower levels of FMRP (mean 2.8 ± 1.3 pg FMRP/ng genomic DNA, = 0.04), in particular observed in younger age- and IQ-adjusted males (mean age 6.9 ± 0.9 years with mean 3.2 ± 1.2 pg FMRP/ng genomic DNA, 57% with severe ASD), compared to FXS without ASD. Those with severe ID had even lower FMRP levels independent of ASD status in the male-only subset. The results underscore the link between expansion, gene methylation, and FMRP deficit. The association between FMRP deficiency and overall severity of the neurobehavioral phenotype invites follow up studies in larger patient cohorts. They would be valuable to confirm and potentiall
ISSN:2076-3425
2076-3425
DOI:10.3390/brainsci10100694