Small noncoding differentially methylated copy-number variants, including lncRNA genes, cause a lethal lung developmental disorder

Przemysław Szafrański(Baylor College of Medicine), Avinash V. Dharmadhikari(Baylor College of Medicine), Erwin Brosens(Erasmus MC - Sophia Children’s Hospital), Priyatansh Gurha(The University of Texas System), Katarzyna Kołodziejska(Baylor College of Medicine), Zhishuo Ou(Baylor College of Medicine), Piotr Dittwald(Baylor College of Medicine), Tadeusz Majewski(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), K. Naga Mohan(Baylor College of Medicine), Bo Chen(Baylor College of Medicine), Richard Person(Baylor College of Medicine), Dick Tibboel(Erasmus MC - Sophia Children’s Hospital), Annelies de Klein(Erasmus MC - Sophia Children’s Hospital), Jason Pinner(Royal Prince Alfred Hospital), Maya Chopra(Royal Prince Alfred Hospital), Girvan Malcolm(Royal Prince Alfred Hospital), Gregory B. Peters(Children's Hospital at Westmead), Susan Arbuckle(Children's Hospital at Westmead), Sixto F. Guiang(University of Minnesota), Virginia A. Hustead(Minnesota Department of Natural Resources), José Jessurun(University of Minnesota), Russel Hirsch(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), David P. Witte(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Isabelle Maystadt(Institute of Pathology and Genetics), Neil J. Sebire(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Richard Fisher(James Cook University Hospital), Claire Langston(Baylor College of Medicine), Partha Sen(Baylor College of Medicine), Paweł Stankiewicz(Baylor College of Medicine)
Genome Research
October 3, 2012
Cited by 161Open Access
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Abstract

An unanticipated and tremendous amount of the noncoding sequence of the human genome is transcribed. Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) constitute a significant fraction of non-protein-coding transcripts; however, their functions remain enigmatic. We demonstrate that deletions of a small noncoding differentially methylated region at 16q24.1, including lncRNA genes, cause a lethal lung developmental disorder, alveolar capillary dysplasia with misalignment of pulmonary veins (ACD/MPV), with parent-of-origin effects. We identify overlapping deletions 250 kb upstream of FOXF1 in nine patients with ACD/MPV that arose de novo specifically on the maternally inherited chromosome and delete lung-specific lncRNA genes. These deletions define a distant cis-regulatory region that harbors, besides lncRNA genes, also a differentially methylated CpG island, binds GLI2 depending on the methylation status of this CpG island, and physically interacts with and up-regulates the FOXF1 promoter. We suggest that lung-transcribed 16q24.1 lncRNAs may contribute to long-range regulation of FOXF1 by GLI2 and other transcription factors. Perturbation of lncRNA-mediated chromatin interactions may, in general, be responsible for position effect phenomena and potentially cause many disorders of human development.


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