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Biallelic variants in CTU2 cause DREAM-PL syndrome and impair thiolation of tRNA wobble U34

Authors :
Valeria Capra
Emily Bryant
Sarah S. Barnett
Mais Hashem
Paul R. Mark
Hutton M. Kearney
Tarfa Al-Sheddi
Vincenzo Nigro
Marcello Scala
Niema Ibrahim
John Millichap
Christopher T Prevost
Egidio Spinelli
Ahmad Alhag
Andrea Accogli
Fatima Estwani
Mona M. Alenazi
Nour Ewida
Firdous Abdulwahab
Adila Al-Kindi
Eman Alobeid
Fowzan S. Alkuraya
Ranad Shaheen
Dragony Fu
Shaheen, Ranad
Mark, Paul
Prevost, Christopher T
Alkindi, Adila
Alhag, Ahmad
Estwani, Fatima
Al-Sheddi, Tarfa
Alobeid, Eman
Alenazi, Mona M
Ewida, Nour
Ibrahim, Niema
Hashem, Mai
Abdulwahab, Firdou
Bryant, Emily M
Spinelli, Egidio
Millichap, John
Barnett, Sarah S
Kearney, Hutton M
Accogli, Andrea
Scala, Marcello
Capra, Valeria
Nigro, Vincenzo
Fu, Dragony
Alkuraya, Fowzan S
Source :
Human mutation. 40(11)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The wobble position in the anticodon loop of tRNA is subject to numerous post-transcriptional modifications. In particular, thiolation of the wobble uridine has been shown to play an important role in codon-anticodon interactions. This modification is catalyzed by a highly conserved CTU1/CTU2 complex, disruption of which has been shown to cause abnormal phenotypes in yeast, worms and plants. We have previously suggested that a single founder splicing variant in human CTU2 causes a novel multiple congenital anomalies syndrome consisting of dysmorphic facies, renal agenesis, ambiguous genitalia, microcephaly, polydactyly, and lissencephaly (DREAM-PL). In this work, we describe five new patients with DREAM-PL phenotype and whose molecular analysis expands the allelic heterogeneity of the syndrome to five different alleles; four of which predict protein truncation. Functional characterization using patient-derived cells for each of these alleles, as well as the original founder allele; revealed a specific impairment of wobble uridine thiolation in all known thiol-containing tRNAs. Our data establish a recognizable CTU2-linked autosomal recessive syndrome in humans characterized by defective thiolation of the wobble uridine. The potential deleterious consequences for the translational efficiency and fidelity during development as a mechanism for pathogenicity represent an attractive target of future investigations. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Details

ISSN :
10981004
Volume :
40
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human mutation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....69a8915866b3662dc5b9bf90cb713b66