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Understanding the Impact of Aberrant Splicing in Coagulation Factor V Deficiency

Rare inherited coagulation disorders (RICDs) are congenital deficiencies of the plasma proteins that are involved in blood coagulation, which generally lead to lifelong bleeding manifestations. These diseases are generally qualitative and/or quantitative defects that are associated with monoallelic...

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Autores principales: Paraboschi, Elvezia Maria, Menegatti, Marzia, Peyvandi, Flora, Duga, Stefano, Asselta, Rosanna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6412230/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30791524
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms20040910
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author Paraboschi, Elvezia Maria
Menegatti, Marzia
Peyvandi, Flora
Duga, Stefano
Asselta, Rosanna
author_facet Paraboschi, Elvezia Maria
Menegatti, Marzia
Peyvandi, Flora
Duga, Stefano
Asselta, Rosanna
author_sort Paraboschi, Elvezia Maria
collection PubMed
description Rare inherited coagulation disorders (RICDs) are congenital deficiencies of the plasma proteins that are involved in blood coagulation, which generally lead to lifelong bleeding manifestations. These diseases are generally qualitative and/or quantitative defects that are associated with monoallelic or biallelic mutations in the relevant gene. Among RICDs, factor V (FV) deficiency is one of the least characterized at the molecular level. Here, we investigated four unrelated patients with reduced plasma FV levels (three severe, one mild), which were associated with a moderately severe bleeding tendency. Sequence analysis of the FV gene identified seven different variants, five hitherto unknown (p.D1669G, c.5789-11C>A, c.5789-12C>A, c.5789-5T>G, and c.6528G>C), and two previously reported (c.158+1G>A and c.5789G>A). The possible pathogenic role of the newly identified missense variant was studied by in silico approaches. The remaining six genetic defects (all putative splicing mutations) were investigated for their possible effects on pre-mRNA splicing by transient transfection experiments in HeLa cells with plasmids expressing appropriate hybrid minigenes. The preparation of minigene constructs was instrumental to demonstrate that the two adjacent variants c.5789-11C>A and c.5789-12C>A are indeed present in cis in the analyzed FV-deficient patient (thus leading to the c.5789-11_12CC>AA mutation). Ex vivo experiments demonstrated that each variant causes either a skipping of the relevant exon or the activation of cryptic splice sites (exonic or intronic), eventually leading to the introduction of a premature termination codon.
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spelling pubmed-64122302019-04-05 Understanding the Impact of Aberrant Splicing in Coagulation Factor V Deficiency Paraboschi, Elvezia Maria Menegatti, Marzia Peyvandi, Flora Duga, Stefano Asselta, Rosanna Int J Mol Sci Article Rare inherited coagulation disorders (RICDs) are congenital deficiencies of the plasma proteins that are involved in blood coagulation, which generally lead to lifelong bleeding manifestations. These diseases are generally qualitative and/or quantitative defects that are associated with monoallelic or biallelic mutations in the relevant gene. Among RICDs, factor V (FV) deficiency is one of the least characterized at the molecular level. Here, we investigated four unrelated patients with reduced plasma FV levels (three severe, one mild), which were associated with a moderately severe bleeding tendency. Sequence analysis of the FV gene identified seven different variants, five hitherto unknown (p.D1669G, c.5789-11C>A, c.5789-12C>A, c.5789-5T>G, and c.6528G>C), and two previously reported (c.158+1G>A and c.5789G>A). The possible pathogenic role of the newly identified missense variant was studied by in silico approaches. The remaining six genetic defects (all putative splicing mutations) were investigated for their possible effects on pre-mRNA splicing by transient transfection experiments in HeLa cells with plasmids expressing appropriate hybrid minigenes. The preparation of minigene constructs was instrumental to demonstrate that the two adjacent variants c.5789-11C>A and c.5789-12C>A are indeed present in cis in the analyzed FV-deficient patient (thus leading to the c.5789-11_12CC>AA mutation). Ex vivo experiments demonstrated that each variant causes either a skipping of the relevant exon or the activation of cryptic splice sites (exonic or intronic), eventually leading to the introduction of a premature termination codon. MDPI 2019-02-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6412230/ /pubmed/30791524 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms20040910 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Paraboschi, Elvezia Maria
Menegatti, Marzia
Peyvandi, Flora
Duga, Stefano
Asselta, Rosanna
Understanding the Impact of Aberrant Splicing in Coagulation Factor V Deficiency
title Understanding the Impact of Aberrant Splicing in Coagulation Factor V Deficiency
title_full Understanding the Impact of Aberrant Splicing in Coagulation Factor V Deficiency
title_fullStr Understanding the Impact of Aberrant Splicing in Coagulation Factor V Deficiency
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the Impact of Aberrant Splicing in Coagulation Factor V Deficiency
title_short Understanding the Impact of Aberrant Splicing in Coagulation Factor V Deficiency
title_sort understanding the impact of aberrant splicing in coagulation factor v deficiency
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6412230/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30791524
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms20040910
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