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Homozygosity for the WRN Helicase-Inactivating Variant, R834C, does not confer a Werner syndrome clinical phenotype

Authors :
Mary J. Emond
Maria del Carmen Cárdenas-Cortés
Julia M. Sidorova
Thomas H. Norwood
Lawrence A. Loeb
Ashwini S. Kamath-Loeb
Jeny Flores-Morales
Raymond J. Monnat
Gabriela Elisa Mercado-Celis
Alessandra Carnevale
Diego G. Zavala-van Rankin
Source :
Scientific Reports
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2017.

Abstract

Loss-of-function mutations in the WRN helicase gene cause Werner syndrome- a progeroid syndrome with an elevated risk of cancer and other age-associated diseases. Large numbers of single nucleotide polymorphisms have been identified in WRN. We report here the organismal, cellular, and molecular phenotypes of variant rs3087425 (c. 2500C > T) that results in an arginine to cysteine substitution at residue 834 (R834C) and up to 90% reduction of WRN helicase activity. This variant is present at a high (5%) frequency in Mexico, where we identified 153 heterozygous and three homozygous individuals among 3,130 genotyped subjects. Family studies of probands identified ten additional TT homozygotes. Biochemical analysis of WRN protein purified from TT lymphoblast cell lines confirmed that the R834C substitution strongly and selectively reduces WRN helicase, but not exonuclease activity. Replication track analyses showed reduced replication fork progression in some homozygous cells following DNA replication stress. Among the thirteen TT homozygotes, we identified a previously unreported and statistically significant gender bias in favor of males (p = 0.0016), but none of the clinical findings associated with Werner syndrome. Our results indicate that WRN helicase activity alone is not rate-limiting for the development of clinical WS.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3d30daa062df39c0553d2f9d4f1002e8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/srep44081