Common genetic variation in the Angelman syndrome imprinting centre affects the imprinting of chromosome 15

Eur J Hum Genet. 2020 Jun;28(6):835-839. doi: 10.1038/s41431-020-0595-y. Epub 2020 Mar 9.

Abstract

Angelman syndrome (AS) is a rare neurogenetic imprinting disorder caused by the loss of function of UBE3A. In ~3-5% of AS patients, the disease is due to an imprinting defect (ID). These patients lack DNA methylation of the maternal SNRPN promotor so that a large SNRPN sense/UBE3A antisense transcript (SNHG14) is expressed, which silences UBE3A. In very rare cases, the ID is caused by a deletion of the AS imprinting centre (AS-IC). To search for sequence alterations, we sequenced this region in 168 patients without an AS-IC deletion, but did not detect any sequence alteration. However, the AS-IC harbours six common variants (five single nucleotide variants and one TATG insertion/deletion variant), which constitute five common haplotypes. To determine if any of these haplotypes is associated with an increased risk for an ID, we investigated 119 informative AS-ID trios with the transmission disequilibrium test, which is a family-based association test that measures the over-transmission of an allele or haplotype from heterozygous parents to affected offspring. By this we observed maternal over-transmission of haplotype H-AS3 (p = 0.0073). Interestingly, H-AS3 is the only haplotype that includes the TATG deletion allele. We conclude that this haplotype and possibly the TATG deletion, which removes a SOX2 binding site, increases the risk for a maternal ID and AS. Our data strengthen the notion that the AS-IC is important for establishing and/or maintaining DNA methylation at the SNRPN promotor and show that common genetic variation can affect genomic imprinting.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Angelman Syndrome / genetics*
  • Chromosomes, Human, Pair 15 / genetics*
  • Genomic Imprinting*
  • Haplotypes
  • Heterozygote
  • Humans
  • Linkage Disequilibrium
  • Polymorphism, Genetic*