TY - JOUR
T1 - Supravalvular aortic stenosis
T2 - A splice site mutation within the elastin gene results in reduced expression of two aberrantly spliced transcripts
AU - Urbán, Zsolt
AU - Michels, Virginia V.
AU - Thibodeau, Stephen N.
AU - Donis-Keller, Helen
AU - Csiszár, Katalin
AU - Boyd, Charles D.
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments We are very grateful to the SVAS families whose cooperation made this study possible. We are also very appreciative of the efforts of James W. Grant and Alison Whelan M.D. who were responsible for specimen collection and the clinical characterization of the SVAS-7 kindred and to members of the Donis-Keller laboratory (Cynthia Helms, Li Liu, Suzanne Cole, Rose Veile, Alison Whelan) who performed linkage and molecular genetic studies in the early phase of the SVAS-7 project. This study was supported in part by an American Heart Association Hawaii Affiliate Grant-In-Aid HIGB-13-98 to Z.U., an NIH RCMI grant RR03061-12 to K.C. and C.D.B., and NIH grants P41 HG01066 and RO1 HG00469 and the Department of Medicine at Washington University to H.D.-K.
PY - 1999
Y1 - 1999
N2 - We have screened the elastin gene for mutations responsible for supravalvular aortic stenosis (SVAS) in two large, independently collected families with isolated (nonsyndromic) SVAS. By single-strand conformation polymorphism and heteroduplex analysis, we have identified a C to G transversion within the acceptor splice site of exon 16 in SVAS patients from both families. This mutation segregates in both families with high penetrance of SVAS, and all affected individuals carry the mutation. Haplotype analysis by using closely linked polymorphisms, including a previously unreported BfaI restriction fragment length polymorphism within the 3'-UTR of the elastin gene, indicates that the mutations found in the two apparently nonoverlapping kindreds are identical by descent. To study the effect of the mutation on the expression of the mutant allele, we have established a primary skin fibroblast culture from one of the affected individuals. Reverse transcription/polymerase chain reaction analysis of elastin mRNA species indicates that the mutation results in two abnormal elastin mRNA species. One mutant elastin mRNA is generated by the activation of a cryptic splice site that lies within intron 15 and that adds 44 bp of intronic sequence to the sequence encoded by exon 16. This insertion creates a frame shift that results in a 59-amino-acid-long abnormal protein sequence and leads to a termination codon in the mRNA sequence encoded by exon 17. The smaller abnormal mRNA species arises as a consequence of the skipping of exon 16. This study demonstrates, for the first time, the expression of mutant alleles of the elastin gene in patients with isolated SVAS.
AB - We have screened the elastin gene for mutations responsible for supravalvular aortic stenosis (SVAS) in two large, independently collected families with isolated (nonsyndromic) SVAS. By single-strand conformation polymorphism and heteroduplex analysis, we have identified a C to G transversion within the acceptor splice site of exon 16 in SVAS patients from both families. This mutation segregates in both families with high penetrance of SVAS, and all affected individuals carry the mutation. Haplotype analysis by using closely linked polymorphisms, including a previously unreported BfaI restriction fragment length polymorphism within the 3'-UTR of the elastin gene, indicates that the mutations found in the two apparently nonoverlapping kindreds are identical by descent. To study the effect of the mutation on the expression of the mutant allele, we have established a primary skin fibroblast culture from one of the affected individuals. Reverse transcription/polymerase chain reaction analysis of elastin mRNA species indicates that the mutation results in two abnormal elastin mRNA species. One mutant elastin mRNA is generated by the activation of a cryptic splice site that lies within intron 15 and that adds 44 bp of intronic sequence to the sequence encoded by exon 16. This insertion creates a frame shift that results in a 59-amino-acid-long abnormal protein sequence and leads to a termination codon in the mRNA sequence encoded by exon 17. The smaller abnormal mRNA species arises as a consequence of the skipping of exon 16. This study demonstrates, for the first time, the expression of mutant alleles of the elastin gene in patients with isolated SVAS.
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U2 - 10.1007/s004390050926
DO - 10.1007/s004390050926
M3 - Article
C2 - 10190324
AN - SCOPUS:0032973922
SN - 0340-6717
VL - 104
SP - 135
EP - 142
JO - Human genetics
JF - Human genetics
IS - 2
ER -