Disease onset in X-linked dystonia-parkinsonism correlates with expansion of a hexameric repeat within an SVA retrotransposon in TAF1

Author:

Bragg D. Cristopher,Mangkalaphiban Kotchaphorn,Vaine Christine A.,Kulkarni Nichita J.,Shin David,Yadav Rachita,Dhakal Jyotsna,Ton Mai-Linh,Cheng Anne,Russo Christopher T.,Ang Mark,Acuña Patrick,Go Criscely,Franceour Taylor N.,Multhaupt-Buell Trisha,Ito Naoto,Müller Ulrich,Hendriks William T.,Breakefield Xandra O.,Sharma Nutan,Ozelius Laurie J.

Abstract

X-linked dystonia-parkinsonism (XDP) is a neurodegenerative disease associated with an antisense insertion of a SINE-VNTR-Alu (SVA)-type retrotransposon within an intron of TAF1. This unique insertion coincides with six additional noncoding sequence changes in TAF1, the gene that encodes TATA-binding protein–associated factor-1, which appear to be inherited together as an identical haplotype in all reported cases. Here we examined the sequence of this SVA in XDP patients (n = 140) and detected polymorphic variation in the length of a hexanucleotide repeat domain, (CCCTCT)n. The number of repeats in these cases ranged from 35 to 52 and showed a highly significant inverse correlation with age at disease onset. Because other SVAs exhibit intrinsic promoter activity that depends in part on the hexameric domain, we assayed the transcriptional regulatory effects of varying hexameric lengths found in the unique XDP SVA retrotransposon using luciferase reporter constructs. When inserted sense or antisense to the luciferase reading frame, the XDP variants repressed or enhanced transcription, respectively, to an extent that appeared to vary with length of the hexamer. Further in silico analysis of this SVA sequence revealed multiple motifs predicted to form G-quadruplexes, with the greatest potential detected for the hexameric repeat domain. These data directly link sequence variation within the XDP-specific SVA sequence to phenotypic variability in clinical disease manifestation and provide insight into potential mechanisms by which this intronic retroelement may induce transcriptional interference in TAF1 expression.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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