Affiliation:
1. Cancer and Blood Diseases Institute, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH
2. Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH
3. College of Nursing, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH
4. Division of Human Genetics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH
5. Pediatric Specialists of Texas, San Antonio, TX
6. Division of Pathology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH
Abstract
Abstract
CDAR (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02964494), a registry for patients with Congenital Dyserythropoietic Anemia (CDA) in North America, has been created with the goal to provide a longitudinal database and associated biorepository to facilitate natural history studies and research on the molecular pathways involved in the pathogenesis of CDAs. A 1 y.o. female patient with non-immune hemolytic anemia with suboptimal reticulocytosis, requiring frequent transfusions, and with the pathologic diagnosis of CDA was enrolled in CDAR. Her father had a similar phenotypical presentation in early childhood and underwent splenectomy at 3 years of age. Since then, he has rarely required transfusions but he continues to have a mild anemia at baseline with characteristics of hemolysis and with suboptimal reticulocytosis; at the time of enrollment, he had hemoglobin of 9.3 g/dL with absolute reticulocyte count of 115 x 106 cells/µl. Next Generation sequencing and deletion/duplication assay for the known CDA-associated genes (CDAN1, C15ORF41, SEC23B, KIF23, GATA1) identified no mutations. Whole-exome sequencing for the patient and her parents (family-trio design) revealed a novel PRDX2 missense variant (c.154C>T; p.Pro52Ser) present in heterozygous state in both proband and her father; no mutation in this gene was present in the asymptomatic mother. In silico prediction programs suggest that this variant is probably damaging and deleterious, causing a non-conservative substitution of a phylogenetically highly-conserved amino acid (down to Baker's yeast), and located in an enzymatically active protein domain, adjacent to the active Cys51, with the potential to change its conformation.
Peroxiredoxin II is highly expressed during terminal erythropoiesis and is one of the most abundant proteins after hemoglobin in erythroblasts and mature erythrocytes. It is an antioxidant enzyme that reduces the reactive oxygen species (ROS), like hydrogen peroxide and alkyl hydroperoxides readily produced within the erythroid cells due to the presence of heme iron and oxygen. In addition, PRDX2 has been implicated in intracellular signaling, cellular proliferation and differentiation, and as a regulator of iron homeostasis. PRDX2-/- mice were found to have hemolytic anemia with evidence of oxidative damage of the erythrocyte proteins resulting to decreased red blood cell (RBC) survival. The aim of this work is to validate the pathogenetic role of the PRDX2 variant found in this family as the molecular cause of this dominantly-inherited CDA and further investigate the role of PRDX2 in human terminal erythropoiesis.
Central review of the patient's bone marrow aspirate and biopsy slides, according to the CDAR protocol, revealed erythroid hyperplasia with dyserythropoiesis, including megaloblastoid changes, nuclear lobation and fragmentation, and binucleated erythroblasts (less than 10%), compatible with atypical CDA. There were rare erythroids with cytoplasmic bridging but no nuclear bridges. Review of the peripheral blood smear showed significant poikilocytosis, mild polychromasia, and the presence of blister and ghost cells reminiscent of G6PD deficiency, pointing to RBC damage by oxidative stress. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and EBV-immortalized lymphocytes were generated from the patients' peripheral blood mononuclear cells after informed consent per CDAR protocol, to allow further in vitro studies of the peroxiredoxin II-deficiency. Flow cytometry confirmed significantly increased ROS in the patients' derived versus control EBV-immortalized lymphocytes as well as in the reticulocytes and mature erythrocytes of the proband and her father, indicating that their PRDX2 variant is causing loss-of-function of the enzyme and increased oxidative stress.
Further work is ongoing to explore the mechanisms of pathogenicity of peroxiredoxin II deficiency towards human dyserythropoiesis and decreased erythrocyte lifespan. To our knowledge, this is the first case of anemia described in humans associated with PRDX2 mutation implicating this gene as a novel candidate gene for atypical, dominantly-inherited CDA.
Disclosures
No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
Publisher
American Society of Hematology
Subject
Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry
Cited by
5 articles.
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