scholarly journals Alpha globin variation in the long-tailed macaque suggests malaria selection

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.L. Faust ◽  
F. Rangkuti ◽  
S. G. Preston ◽  
A. Boyd ◽  
P. Flammer ◽  
...  

AbstractHuman haemoglobin variants, such as sickle, confer protection against death from malaria; consequently, frequencies of such variants are often greatly elevated in humans from malaria endemic regions. Among non-human primates, the long-tailed macaque, Macaca fascicularis, also displays substantial haemoglobin variation. Almost all M. fascicularis haemoglobin variation is in the alpha globin chain, encoded by two linked genes: HBA1 and HBA2. We demonstrate that alpha globin variation in M. fascicularis correlates with the strength of malaria selection. We identify a range of missense mutations in M. fascicularis alpha globin and demonstrate that some of these exhibit a striking HBA1 or HBA2 specificity, a pattern consistent with computational simulations of selection on genes exhibiting copy number variation. We propose that M. fascicularis accumulated amino acid substitutions in its alpha globin genes under malaria selection, in a process that closely mirrors, but does not entirely converge with, human malaria adaptation.

BMC Genomics ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas R. Gschwind ◽  
Anjali Singh ◽  
Ulrich Certa ◽  
Alexandre Reymond ◽  
Tobias Heckel

Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 4085-4085 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simona Soverini ◽  
Caterina De Benedittis ◽  
Manuela Mancini ◽  
Michela Rondoni ◽  
Cristina Papayannidis ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and Aims: The term Systemic Mastocytosis (SM) identifies a poorly understood group of rare and clinically heterogenous myeloproliferative neoplasms characterized by abnormal growth and activation of mast cells (MCs) and their precursors in the bone marrow and in various tissues and organs. Based on phenotype and extent of organ infiltration/dysfunction, a spectrum of disease variants can be recognized ranging from indolent SM (ISM) to aggressive SM (ASM) and mast cell leukemia (MCL). The fact that in all cases, including ISM who have a (near) normal life expectancy, neoplastic MCs display the same D816V KIT gene mutation points to additional mechanisms and molecular defects as responsible for ASM and MCL. So far, however, this issue has mainly been addressed with targeted resequencing studies of candidate gene panels. We thus decided to undertake an integrated molecular characterization study of ASM and MCL to identify novel, functionally relevant molecular lesions and/or clinically actionable signaling pathways. Methods: A discovery panel including 6 patients with ASM and 6 patients with MCL was studied using whole exome sequencing (WES) and copy number variation (CNV) analysis. WES (80x) was performed on a Hiseq 2500 (Illumina). CNV was done using Cytoscan HD Arrays (Affymetrix). Paired normal/MC DNA was analyzed in all but 2 archival MCL cases for whom germline DNA was not available. A validation panel of 30 ISM, 5 smoldering SM and 20 additional ASM was also included in this study. Results: In the discovery panel, WES identified a total of 1554 point mutations, small insertions and deletions. Seven hundred and eighty-five were non-silent mutations in 698 genes, with an average of 51 (range, 30-186) non-silent mutations per patient. Non-silent mutations included 354 missense mutations, 188 nonsense mutations, 145 frameshift insertions/deletions, 98 non-frameshift insertions/deletions. C to T transitions were by far the most frequent. Orthogonal validation estimated the accuracy of mutation calls at >95%. Interrogation of the COSMIC and OMIM databases revealed 42 known cancer genes. Among the missense mutations, 87 were predicted to have a high probability of being deleterious by Condel. MCL cases were found not to harbour a higher mutation load as compared to ASM cases. High resolution CN analysis showed that focal amplifications/deletions/loss-of-heterozygosity (LOH) were prevalent over arm-level alterations (found in 3 patients only). Genes were selected for further assessment when recurrently mutated in ≥2 patients or concurrently identified in WES and CNV analyses or previously associated with leukemogenesis or cancer pathogenesis. Among these, genes already reported to be affected by mutations in SM included TET2, NRAS, ASXL1, CBL, IDH1, SRSF2, SF3B1, RUNX1. We also identified genetic alterations in genes not previously implicated in SM pathogenesis including TP53BP1, RUNX3, NCOR2, CDC27, CCND3, EI24, MLL3, ARID1B, ARID3B, ARID4A, SETD1A, SETD1B, KDM1B, PRDM1, ATM, WRN. A long tail of infrequently mutated genes dominated, resulting in significant intertumoural heterogeneity. However, when genes were assigned to functional pathways to discern patterns of mutations across different patients, we found that PI3K/Akt and MAPK pathways, calcium pathway, chromatin modification, DNA methylation, and DNA damage repair were consistently affected (Figure 1). Further assessment of the mutation frequency of selected genes within each pathway and functional validation at the protein level are currently ongoing in the validation panel. Preliminary findings on a tumor suppressor selected among those identified by WES show transcript and/or protein downmodulation due to inactivating mutations, transcriptional silencing or enhanced degradation in 17/20 ASM. Detailed results will be presented at the meeting. Conclusions: WES and CNV analyses of ASM and MCL revealed a complex landscape, not unexpected when considering the clinical heterogeneity of these patients. Nonetheless, key pathways were found to be recurrently altered. Further investigation of selected candidate genes and pathways is warranted and will cast light on the cooperative genetic (and epigenetic?) events underlying the more aggressive forms of SM - paving the way to a better prognostic stratification and more effective treatment. <>This study was supported by ELN, AIL, AIRC, progetto Regione-Università 2010-12 (L. Bolondi), FP7 NGS-PTL project. Disclosures Soverini: Ariad: Consultancy; Bristol-Myers Squibb: Consultancy; Novartis: Consultancy. Valent:Novartis: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Ariad: Honoraria, Research Funding; Bristol-Myers Squibb: Honoraria; Pfizer: Honoraria; Celgene: Honoraria. Cavo:Janssen-Cilag, Celgene, Amgen, BMS: Honoraria. Martinelli:Novartis: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; BMS: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; ROCHE: Consultancy; Pfizer: Consultancy; Ariad: Consultancy; AMGEN: Consultancy; MSD: Consultancy.


The genetic and acquired disorders of hum an haemoglobin provide a diverse group of naturally occurring models for analysing the regulation of protein synthesis. They include structural haemoglobin variants, thalassaemias, which are conditions in which there is a reduced rate ofglobin chain production, and hereditary persistence of foetal haemoglobin (HPFH ) in which there is an inherited abnormality in the switch from foetal to adult haemoglobin synthesis. The thalassaemias result from a diverse series of cis acting lesions of the globin genes which include deletions, insertions, frame shift mutations, and point mutations involving transcription, messenger RNA processing, initiation, termination, poly A addition and globin chain stability. Many forms of HPFH are due to deletions of the β-like gene cluster; it has been suggested that they may involve regions of the cluster which are involved in the regulation of the foetal to adult globin chain switch. So far, however, no regions of this type have been identified with certainty. The varieties of HPFH not associated with major gene deletions, or those caused by genetic determ inants that are not linked to the globin gene clusters, and some of the acquired forms of α thalassaemia associated with mental retardation or leukaemia, may be more useful models for studying the regulation of the globin genes, particularly their developm ental control.


2009 ◽  
Vol 126 (4) ◽  
pp. 333-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Fontanesi ◽  
F. Beretti ◽  
V. Riggio ◽  
E. Gómez González ◽  
S. Dall’Olio ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 3565-3565
Author(s):  
Faith J. Harrow ◽  
Amanda P. Cline ◽  
Nancy E. Seidel ◽  
Derek Persons ◽  
Patrick G. Gallagher ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3565 Poster Board III-502 Successful gene therapy for hemoglobin disorders beta-thalassemia and sickle cell disease (SCD) has been hindered by inefficient expression of beta-like globin genes from viral vectors. It is estimated that transduction of ∼25% of hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) to express a beta-like globin gene at ∼20% the level of endogenous alpha-globin would be therapeutic. The expression of the beta-like globin genes in their native locus is a precisely regulated process that relies on the coordinated activities of several cis-acting enhancer elements that make up the beta-globin locus control region (LCR). Expression of therapeutic levels of beta-like globin in mouse models and patient cells requires inclusion of LCR elements. These LCR elements are susceptible to silencing, reduce virus titer and can potentially activate oncogenes at the site of proviral insertion. To minimize these risks we have developed a novel approach using non-globin erythroid promoters to drive high levels of globin gene expression independent of enhancers. Previously, we showed that a minimal 276-bp promoter of the human ankyrin gene (ANK-1) does not contain an enhancer element, but does contain a barrier element that allows erythroid-specific, uniform, position independent and copy-number dependent expression of a linked gamma-globin gene. However, the level of gamma-globin expression from the ANK-1 promoter (4% of mouse alpha-globin per copy) was sub-therapeutic. TFIID, a component of the transcription initiation complex, binds a 9-bp sequence (TGCGGTGAG) within the wild type ANK-1 promoter. A dinucleotide deletion within this sequence that disrupts the binding of TFIID and results in ankyrin deficient Hereditary Spherocytosis (Gallagher et al. Hum Mol Genet.14: 2501-9. 2005). We hypothesized that sequence modifications of the ANK1 promoter in this region would increase the affinity for TFIID and increase expression. Mutational analysis of the wildtype TFIID site identified a number of sequence variants that increase expression. An ANK-1 promoter sequence variant that differs from the wildtype TFIID sequence in the first three nucleotides (GCGGGTGAG; GC-ANK-1), results in a 7-fold increase in transcriptional activity in K562 cells. We developed five independent transgenic mouse lines that carry this GC-ANK-1 promoter linked to a human gamma globin gene. Expression in all five lines is erythroid-specific, uniform, position independent and copy-number dependent. Moreover, the average level of gamma-globin mRNA is 34 ± 14 % of mouse alpha-globin mRNA per transgene copy, a 8.5-fold increase in gamma-globin expression over mice harboring the wildtype ANK-1 promoter. We developed a simplified lentiviral vector that contains the CG-ANK-1/gamma-globin gene. This vector was produced at high titer and transduced 57% (23/40) of mouse colony forming unit Spleen (CFU-S) cells. In CFU-S containing single copies of the provirus, the level of gamma-globin mRNA was 6.8 ± 2.9 % of mouse alpha-globin per copy. In CFU-S with two and three copies of the GC-ANK-1 gamma-globin provirus, expression of gamma-globin mRNA averaged 20% ± 1.6% and 30% of mouse alpha-globin per copy respectively, demonstrating copy-number dependent of expression. Overall, an analysis of 16 CFU-S foci demonstrated that the CG-ANK-1/gamma-globin vector expressed gamma globin mRNA at levels that average 8.5 ± 2.0% of mouse alpha-globin. Our data demonstrate that just two copies of the simplified CG-ANK-1/gamma-globin lentiviral vector could potentially produce the levels of gamma-globin necessary for effective treatment of the hemoglobin disorders. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1993 ◽  
Vol 90 (23) ◽  
pp. 11262-11266 ◽  
Author(s):  
J A Sharpe ◽  
D J Wells ◽  
E Whitelaw ◽  
P Vyas ◽  
D R Higgs ◽  
...  

A 350-bp segment of DNA associated with an erythroid-specific DNase I-hypersensitive site (HS-40), upstream of the alpha-globin gene cluster, has been identified as the major tissue-specific regulator of the alpha-globin genes. However, this element does not direct copy number-dependent or developmentally stable expression of the human genes in transgenic mice. To determine whether additional upstream hypersensitive sites could provide more complete regulation of alpha gene expression we have studied 17 lines of transgenic mice bearing various DNA fragments containing HSs -33, -10, -8, and -4, in addition to HS -40. Position-independent, high-level expression of the human zeta- and alpha-globin genes was consistently observed in embryonic erythroid cells. However, the additional HSs did not confer copy-number dependence, alter the level of expression, or prevent the variable down-regulation of expression in adults. These results suggest that the region upstream of the human alpha-globin genes is not equivalent to that upstream of the beta locus and that although the two clusters are coordinately expressed, there may be differences in their regulation.


2015 ◽  
Vol 76 (S 01) ◽  
Author(s):  
Georgios Zenonos ◽  
Peter Howard ◽  
Maureen Lyons-Weiler ◽  
Wang Eric ◽  
William LaFambroise ◽  
...  

BIOCELL ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 87-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergio LAURITO ◽  
Juan A. CUETO ◽  
Jimena PEREZ ◽  
Mar韆 ROQU�

Author(s):  
М.Е. Лопаткина ◽  
В.С. Фишман ◽  
М.М. Гридина ◽  
Н.А. Скрябин ◽  
Т.В. Никитина ◽  
...  

Проведен анализ генной экспрессии в нейронах, дифференцированных из индуцированных плюрипотентных стволовых клеток пациентов с идиопатическими интеллектуальными нарушениями и реципрокными хромосомными мутациями в регионе 3p26.3, затрагивающими единственный ген CNTN6. Для нейронов с различным типом хромосомных аберраций была показана глобальная дисрегуляция генной экспрессии. В нейронах с вариациями числа копий гена CNTN6 была снижена экспрессия генов, продукты которых вовлечены в процессы развития центральной нервной системы. The gene expression analysis of iPSC-derived neurons, obtained from patients with idiopathic intellectual disability and reciprocal microdeletion and microduplication in 3p26.3 region affecting the single CNTN6 gene was performed. The global gene expression dysregulation was demonstrated for cells with CNTN6 copy number variation. Gene expression in neurons with CNTN6 copy number changes was downregulated for genes, whose products are involved in the central nervous system development.


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