Methylated and unmethylated epialleles support variegated epigenetic silencing in Friedreich ataxia

Layne N. Rodden(University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center), Yogesh K. Chutake(University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center), Kaitlyn M. Gilliam(University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center), Christina Lam(University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center), Elisabetta Soragni(Scripps Research Institute), Lauren Hauser(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Matthew Gilliam(University of Oklahoma), Graham B. Wiley(Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation), Michael P. Anderson(University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center), Joel Gottesfeld(Scripps Research Institute), David R. Lynch(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Sanjay I. Bidichandani(University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center)
Human Molecular Genetics
December 1, 2020
Cited by 47Open Access
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Abstract

Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is typically caused by homozygosity for an expanded GAA triplet-repeat in intron 1 of the FXN gene, which results in transcriptional deficiency via epigenetic silencing. Most patients are homozygous for alleles containing > 500 triplets, but a subset (~20%) have at least one expanded allele with < 500 triplets and a distinctly milder phenotype. We show that in FRDA DNA methylation spreads upstream from the expanded repeat, further than previously recognized, and establishes an FRDA-specific region of hypermethylation in intron 1 (~90% in FRDA versus < 10% in non-FRDA) as a novel epigenetic signature. The hypermethylation of this differentially methylated region (FRDA-DMR) was observed in a variety of patient-derived cells; it significantly correlated with FXN transcriptional deficiency and age of onset, and it reverted to the non-disease state in isogenically corrected induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived neurons. Bisulfite deep sequencing of the FRDA-DMR in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 73 FRDA patients revealed considerable intra-individual epiallelic variability, including fully methylated, partially methylated, and unmethylated epialleles. Although unmethylated epialleles were rare (median = 0.33%) in typical patients homozygous for long GAA alleles with > 500 triplets, a significantly higher prevalence of unmethylated epialleles (median = 9.8%) was observed in patients with at least one allele containing < 500 triplets, less severe FXN deficiency (>20%) and later onset (>15 years). The higher prevalence in mild FRDA of somatic FXN epialleles devoid of DNA methylation is consistent with variegated epigenetic silencing mediated by expanded triplet-repeats. The proportion of unsilenced somatic FXN genes is an unrecognized phenotypic determinant in FRDA and has implications for the deployment of effective therapies.


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