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Interferon receptor gene dosage determines diverse hallmarks of Down syndrome

Authors :
Katherine A. Waugh
Ross Minter
Jessica Baxter
Congwu Chi
Kathryn D. Tuttle
Neetha P. Eduthan
Matthew D. Galbraith
Kohl T. Kinning
Zdenek Andrysik
Paula Araya
Hannah Dougherty
Lauren N. Dunn
Michael Ludwig
Kyndal A. Schade
Dayna Tracy
Keith P. Smith
Ross E. Granrath
Nicolas Busquet
Santosh Khanal
Ryan D. Anderson
Liza L. Cox
Belinda Enriquez Estrada
Angela L. Rachubinski
Hannah R. Lyford
Eleanor C. Britton
David J. Orlicky
Jennifer L. Matsuda
Kunhua Song
Timothy C. Cox
Kelly D. Sullivan
Joaquin M. Espinosa
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Trisomy 21 causes Down syndrome, a condition characterized by cognitive impairments, immune dysregulation, and atypical morphogenesis. Using whole blood transcriptome analysis, we demonstrate that specific overexpression of four interferon receptors encoded on chromosome 21 associates with chronic interferon hyperactivity and systemic inflammation in Down syndrome. To define the contribution of interferon receptor overexpression to Down syndrome phenotypes, we used genome editing to correct interferon receptor gene dosage in mice carrying triplication of a large genomic region orthologous to human chromosome 21. Normalization of interferon receptor copy number attenuated lethal antiviral responses, prevented heart malformations, decreased developmental delays, improved cognition and normalized craniofacial anomalies. Therefore, interferon receptor gene dosage determines major hallmarks of Down syndrome, indicating that trisomy 21 elicits an interferonopathy amenable to therapeutic intervention.One-Sentence SummaryCorrection of interferon receptor gene dosage rescues multiple key phenotypes in a mouse model of trisomy 21.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c0537897f7410b5176b3650f94e662bc