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  2. The long-range interaction between two GNAS imprinting control regions delineates pseudohypoparathyroidism type 1B pathogenesis

The long-range interaction between two GNAS imprinting control regions delineates pseudohypoparathyroidism type 1B pathogenesis

  • J Clin Invest. 2023 Feb 28;e167953. doi: 10.1172/JCI167953.
Yorihiro Iwasaki 1 Cagri Aksu 1 Monica Reyes 1 Birol Ay 1 Qing He 1 Murat Bastepe 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, United States of America.
Abstract

Genetic defects of GNAS, the imprinted gene encoding the stimulatory G protein α-subunit, are responsible for multiple diseases. Abnormal GNAS imprinting causes pseudohypoparathyroidism type 1B (PHP1B), a prototype of mammalian end-organ hormone resistance. Hypomethylation at the maternally methylated GNAS A/B region is the only shared defect in PHP1B patients. In autosomal dominant (AD) PHP1B kindreds, A/B hypomethylation is associated with maternal microdeletions at either the GNAS NESP55 differentially methylated region or the STX16 gene located ~170 kb upstream. Functional evidence is meager regarding the causality of these microdeletions. Moreover, the mechanisms linking A/B methylation and these putative imprinting control regions (ICRs), NESP-ICR and STX16-ICR, remain unknown. Here, we generated a human embryonic stem cell model of AD-PHP1B by introducing ICR deletions using CRISPR/Cas9. Using this model, we showed that NESP-ICR is required for methylation and transcriptional silencing of A/B on the maternal allele. We also found that SXT16-ICR is a long-range enhancer of NESP55 transcription, which originates from maternal NESP-ICR. Furthermore, we demonstrated that STX16-ICR is an embryonic stage-specific enhancer enabled by the direct binding of pluripotency factors. Our findings uncover an essential GNAS imprinting control mechanism and advance the molecular understanding of the PHP1B pathogenesis.

Keywords

Embryonic stem cells; Endocrinology; Epigenetics; Genetics; Imprinting.

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