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THU209 Small INDELs In The Androgen Receptor Gene: Phenotype Implications And Mechanisms Of Mutagenesis In Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome

Disclosure: R.L. Batista: None. R.M. Ramos: None. A.F. Afonso: None. R.J. Petroli: None. M.Y. Nishi: None. M.M. Ferrari: None. S. Domenice: None. B.B. Mendonca: None. Small indels are insertions or deletions of one or more nucleotides into the DNA sequence. Indels are highly abundant in human genome...

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Autores principales: Batista, Rafael Loch, Ramos, Raquel M, Afonso, Ana Caroline F, Petroli, Reginaldo J, Nishi, Mirian Yumie, Martins Ferrari, Maria Tereza, Domenice, Sorahia, Mendonca, Berenice Bilharinho
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10555767/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1460
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author Batista, Rafael Loch
Ramos, Raquel M
Afonso, Ana Caroline F
Petroli, Reginaldo J
Nishi, Mirian Yumie
Martins Ferrari, Maria Tereza
Domenice, Sorahia
Mendonca, Berenice Bilharinho
author_facet Batista, Rafael Loch
Ramos, Raquel M
Afonso, Ana Caroline F
Petroli, Reginaldo J
Nishi, Mirian Yumie
Martins Ferrari, Maria Tereza
Domenice, Sorahia
Mendonca, Berenice Bilharinho
author_sort Batista, Rafael Loch
collection PubMed
description Disclosure: R.L. Batista: None. R.M. Ramos: None. A.F. Afonso: None. R.J. Petroli: None. M.Y. Nishi: None. M.M. Ferrari: None. S. Domenice: None. B.B. Mendonca: None. Small indels are insertions or deletions of one or more nucleotides into the DNA sequence. Indels are highly abundant in human genomes and have contributed massively to genome evolution. However, the role of indels and their underlined mechanisms of mutagenesis in Mendelian disorders still needs to be appreciated. To explore the contribution of indels in a monogenic disorder, we analyzed all indels in the androgen receptor gene, including three novel indels, using Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome (AIS) as a model. The goal was to profile indels in AIS. To build this profile, we analyzed the indel distribution through the AR coding region, compared with genomic and exonic populational data, and analyzed their impact on the AIS phenotype and their likely mechanism of mutagenesis. We present 82 different indels in the AR gene reported in individuals with AIS. In most cases (n=78; 95.1%), the phenotype is complete AIS (CAIS). There are four AR indels reported in mild AIS. Most short indels in the AR gene among AIS are frameshift indels (n=64; 79%). Indels are distributed along the entire AR gene, with NTD domain predominance (n=45; 54.9%), followed by LTD domain (n=28; 34.1%). Most are small deletions (n=49; 59.7%), followed by small insertions (n=29; 35.3%) and complex frameshift indels (n=4; 4.8%). Most indels are short (<10 bp; n=81 = 98.8%), with an average of 2.4 nucleotides by indel. Most indels are at non-repetitive sequences with no changes in copy counting (n = 68; 82.9%). Thirteen indels were identified within tandem repeats (15.8%), whereas seven indels were at homopolymers run (8.5%). Trinucleotide regions (Poly-Q, Poly-G) are prone to indels, but indels also happen in other trinucleotide stretches (Poli-L, Poly-P). Regarding the change in copy counting, thirty-nine (47.5%) indels are CCC indels. Indel reported in MAIS is all located at tandem repeats, while all at non-repetitive sequences caused CAIS. 3.65% of AR indels are at a 6bp consensus sequence (TG A/G A/G G/T A/C). In summary, indels represent a significant portion of the variants identified in the AR gene in patients with AIS. Unlike the non-synonymous variants related to this gene, there is a genotype-phenotype correlation (indel - CAIS congruency). However, small NFS indels at small triplet runs can slightly compromise AR function leading to the mild phenotype. Homopolymer runs, and trinucleotide repeats are exonic regions at risk for indels. Slippage explains half of the cases of AR indels. These results increase the molecular understanding of the androgen receptor disruption and the underlined mechanisms of indel mutagenesis in exonic regions and their implication on phenotype. Presentation: Thursday, June 15, 2023
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spelling pubmed-105557672023-10-07 THU209 Small INDELs In The Androgen Receptor Gene: Phenotype Implications And Mechanisms Of Mutagenesis In Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome Batista, Rafael Loch Ramos, Raquel M Afonso, Ana Caroline F Petroli, Reginaldo J Nishi, Mirian Yumie Martins Ferrari, Maria Tereza Domenice, Sorahia Mendonca, Berenice Bilharinho J Endocr Soc Pediatric Endocrinology Disclosure: R.L. Batista: None. R.M. Ramos: None. A.F. Afonso: None. R.J. Petroli: None. M.Y. Nishi: None. M.M. Ferrari: None. S. Domenice: None. B.B. Mendonca: None. Small indels are insertions or deletions of one or more nucleotides into the DNA sequence. Indels are highly abundant in human genomes and have contributed massively to genome evolution. However, the role of indels and their underlined mechanisms of mutagenesis in Mendelian disorders still needs to be appreciated. To explore the contribution of indels in a monogenic disorder, we analyzed all indels in the androgen receptor gene, including three novel indels, using Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome (AIS) as a model. The goal was to profile indels in AIS. To build this profile, we analyzed the indel distribution through the AR coding region, compared with genomic and exonic populational data, and analyzed their impact on the AIS phenotype and their likely mechanism of mutagenesis. We present 82 different indels in the AR gene reported in individuals with AIS. In most cases (n=78; 95.1%), the phenotype is complete AIS (CAIS). There are four AR indels reported in mild AIS. Most short indels in the AR gene among AIS are frameshift indels (n=64; 79%). Indels are distributed along the entire AR gene, with NTD domain predominance (n=45; 54.9%), followed by LTD domain (n=28; 34.1%). Most are small deletions (n=49; 59.7%), followed by small insertions (n=29; 35.3%) and complex frameshift indels (n=4; 4.8%). Most indels are short (<10 bp; n=81 = 98.8%), with an average of 2.4 nucleotides by indel. Most indels are at non-repetitive sequences with no changes in copy counting (n = 68; 82.9%). Thirteen indels were identified within tandem repeats (15.8%), whereas seven indels were at homopolymers run (8.5%). Trinucleotide regions (Poly-Q, Poly-G) are prone to indels, but indels also happen in other trinucleotide stretches (Poli-L, Poly-P). Regarding the change in copy counting, thirty-nine (47.5%) indels are CCC indels. Indel reported in MAIS is all located at tandem repeats, while all at non-repetitive sequences caused CAIS. 3.65% of AR indels are at a 6bp consensus sequence (TG A/G A/G G/T A/C). In summary, indels represent a significant portion of the variants identified in the AR gene in patients with AIS. Unlike the non-synonymous variants related to this gene, there is a genotype-phenotype correlation (indel - CAIS congruency). However, small NFS indels at small triplet runs can slightly compromise AR function leading to the mild phenotype. Homopolymer runs, and trinucleotide repeats are exonic regions at risk for indels. Slippage explains half of the cases of AR indels. These results increase the molecular understanding of the androgen receptor disruption and the underlined mechanisms of indel mutagenesis in exonic regions and their implication on phenotype. Presentation: Thursday, June 15, 2023 Oxford University Press 2023-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10555767/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1460 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Pediatric Endocrinology
Batista, Rafael Loch
Ramos, Raquel M
Afonso, Ana Caroline F
Petroli, Reginaldo J
Nishi, Mirian Yumie
Martins Ferrari, Maria Tereza
Domenice, Sorahia
Mendonca, Berenice Bilharinho
THU209 Small INDELs In The Androgen Receptor Gene: Phenotype Implications And Mechanisms Of Mutagenesis In Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome
title THU209 Small INDELs In The Androgen Receptor Gene: Phenotype Implications And Mechanisms Of Mutagenesis In Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome
title_full THU209 Small INDELs In The Androgen Receptor Gene: Phenotype Implications And Mechanisms Of Mutagenesis In Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome
title_fullStr THU209 Small INDELs In The Androgen Receptor Gene: Phenotype Implications And Mechanisms Of Mutagenesis In Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome
title_full_unstemmed THU209 Small INDELs In The Androgen Receptor Gene: Phenotype Implications And Mechanisms Of Mutagenesis In Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome
title_short THU209 Small INDELs In The Androgen Receptor Gene: Phenotype Implications And Mechanisms Of Mutagenesis In Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome
title_sort thu209 small indels in the androgen receptor gene: phenotype implications and mechanisms of mutagenesis in androgen insensitivity syndrome
topic Pediatric Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10555767/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1460
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