Congenital afibrinogenemia is the most severe congenital fibrinogen disorder, characterised by undetectable fibrinogen in circulation. Causative mutations can be divided into two main classes: null mutations with no protein production at all and missense mutations producing abnormal protein chains that are retained inside the cell. The vast majority of cases are due to single base pair mutations or small insertions or deletions in the coding regions or intron-exon junctions of FGB, FGA and FGG. Only a few large rearrangements have been described, all deletions involving FGA. Here we report the characterization of a 403 bp duplication of the FGG exon 8-intron 8 junction accounting for congenital afibrinogenemia in a large consanguineous family from Turkey. This mutation, which had escaped detection by Sanger sequencing of short PCR amplicons of coding sequences and splice sites, was identified by studying multiple alignments of reads obtained from Whole Exome Sequencing of a heterozygous individual followed by PCR amplification and sequencing of a larger portion of FGG. Because the mutation duplicates the donor splice site of intron 8, we predicted that the impact of the mutation would be on FGG transcript splicing. Analysis of mRNAs produced by cells transiently transfected with normal or mutant minigene constructs showed that the duplication causes production of several aberrant FGG transcripts generating premature truncating codons.

A homozygous duplication of the FGG exon 8-intron 8 junction causes congenital afibrinogenemia. Lessons learned from the study of a large consanguineous Turkish family / M. Guipponi, F. Masclaux, F. Sloan-Béna, C. Di Sanza, N. Özbek, F. Peyvandi, M. Menegatti, A. Casini, B. Malbora, M. Neerman-Arbez. - In: HAEMATOLOGICA. - ISSN 1592-8721. - (2021). [Epub ahead of print] [10.3324/haematol.2021.278945]

A homozygous duplication of the FGG exon 8-intron 8 junction causes congenital afibrinogenemia. Lessons learned from the study of a large consanguineous Turkish family

F. Peyvandi;M. Menegatti;
2021

Abstract

Congenital afibrinogenemia is the most severe congenital fibrinogen disorder, characterised by undetectable fibrinogen in circulation. Causative mutations can be divided into two main classes: null mutations with no protein production at all and missense mutations producing abnormal protein chains that are retained inside the cell. The vast majority of cases are due to single base pair mutations or small insertions or deletions in the coding regions or intron-exon junctions of FGB, FGA and FGG. Only a few large rearrangements have been described, all deletions involving FGA. Here we report the characterization of a 403 bp duplication of the FGG exon 8-intron 8 junction accounting for congenital afibrinogenemia in a large consanguineous family from Turkey. This mutation, which had escaped detection by Sanger sequencing of short PCR amplicons of coding sequences and splice sites, was identified by studying multiple alignments of reads obtained from Whole Exome Sequencing of a heterozygous individual followed by PCR amplification and sequencing of a larger portion of FGG. Because the mutation duplicates the donor splice site of intron 8, we predicted that the impact of the mutation would be on FGG transcript splicing. Analysis of mRNAs produced by cells transiently transfected with normal or mutant minigene constructs showed that the duplication causes production of several aberrant FGG transcripts generating premature truncating codons.
Settore MED/09 - Medicina Interna
2021
1-lug-2021
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/904013
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