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  4. Variant-specific pathophysiological mechanisms of AFF3 differently influence transcriptome profiles
 
research article

Variant-specific pathophysiological mechanisms of AFF3 differently influence transcriptome profiles

Bassani, Sissy
•
Chrast, Jacqueline
•
Ambrosini, Giovanna  
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May 30, 2024
Genome Medicine

Background: We previously described the KINSSHIP syndrome, an autosomal dominant disorder associated with intellectual disability (ID), mesomelic dysplasia and horseshoe kidney,caused by de novo variants in the degron of AFF3. Mouse knock-ins and overexpression in zebrafish provided evidence for a dominant-negative (DN) mode-of-action, wherein an increased level of AFF3 resulted in pathological effects. Methods: Evolutionary constraints suggest that other mode-of-inheritance could be at play. We challenged this hypothesis by screening ID cohorts for individuals with predicted-to-be deleterious variants in AFF3. We used both animal and cellular models to assess the deleteriousness of the identified variants. Results: We identified an individual with a KINSSHIP-like phenotype carrying a de novo partial duplication of AFF3 further strengthening the hypothesis that an increased level of AFF3 is pathological. We also detected seventeen individuals displaying a milder syndrome with either heterozygous LoF or biallelic missense variants in AFF3. Consistent with semi-dominance, we discovered three patients with homozygous LoF and one compound heterozygote for a LoF and a missense variant, who presented more severe phenotypes than their heterozygous parents. Matching zebrafish knockdowns exhibit neurological defects that could be rescued by expressing human AFF3 mRNA, confirming their association with the ablation of aff3. Conversely, some of the human AFF3 mRNAs carrying missense variants identified in affected individuals did not complement. Overexpression of mutated AFF3 mRNAs in zebrafish embryos produced a significant increase of abnormal larvae compared to wild-type overexpression further demonstrating deleteriousness. To further assess the effect of AFF3 variation, we profiled the transcriptome of fibroblasts from affected individuals and engineered isogenic cells harboring +/+, DN/DN, LoF/+, LoF/LoF or DN/LoF AFF3 genotypes. The expression of more than a third of the AFF3 bound loci is modified in either the DN/DN or the LoF/LoF lines. While the same pathways are affected, only about one-third of the differentially expressed genes are common to these homozygote datasets, indicating that AFF3 LoF and DN variants largely modulate transcriptomes differently, e.g. the DNA repair pathway displayed opposite modulation. Conclusions: Our results and the high pleiotropy shown by variation at this locus suggest that minute changes in AFF3 function are deleterious.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1186/s13073-024-01339-y
Web of Science ID

WOS:001235258100001

Author(s)
Bassani, Sissy
•
Chrast, Jacqueline
•
Ambrosini, Giovanna  
•
Voisin, Norine
•
Schuetz, Frederic
•
Brusco, Alfredo
•
Sirchia, Fabio
•
Turban, Lydia
•
Schubert, Susanna
•
Abou Jamra, Rami
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Date Issued

2024-05-30

Publisher

BMC

Published in
Genome Medicine
Volume

16

Issue

1

Start page

72

Subjects

Life Sciences & Biomedicine

•

Mesomelic Dysplasia

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Horseshoe Kidney

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Intellectual Disability

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Transcriptome

•

Zebrafish Model

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
BICC  
FunderGrant Number

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Frderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Available on Infoscience
June 19, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/208691
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