| What is the new Cardiac Valvular Form of EDS? |
What is the new Cardiac Valvular Form of EDS?Splice site mutations in the COL1A2 gene of type I collagen can
give rise to forms of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS) because of partial or
complete skipping of exon 6, as well as to mild, moderate, or lethal forms of
osteogenesis imperfecta as a consequence of skipping of other exons. We
identified three unrelated individuals with a rare recessively inherited form of
EDS (characterized by joint hypermobility, skin hyperextensibility, and cardiac
valvular defects); in two of them, COL1A2 messenger RNA (mRNA) instability
results from compound heterozygosity for splice site mutations in the COL1A2
gene, and, in the third, it results from homozygosity for a nonsense codon. The
splice site mutations led to use of cryptic splice donor sites, creation of a
downstream premature termination codon, and extremely unstable mRNA. In the
wild-type allele, the two introns (IVS11 and IVS24) in which these mutations
occurred were usually spliced slowly in relation to their respective immediate
upstream introns. In the mutant alleles, the upstream intron was removed, so
that exon skipping could not occur. In the context of the mutation in IVS24,
computer-generated folding of a short stretch of mRNA surrounding the mutation
site demonstrated realignment of the relationships between the donor and
acceptor sites that could facilitate use of a cryptic donor site. These findings
suggest that the order of intron removal is an important variable in prediction
of mutation outcome at splice sites and that folding of the nascent mRNA could
be one element that contributes to determination of order of splicing. The
complete absence of pro alpha 2(I)chains has the surprising effect of producing
cardiac valvular disease without bone involvement. (Schwarze U, et.al "Rare
autosomal recessive cardiac valvular form of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome results from
mutations in the COL1A2 gene that activate the nonsense-mediated RNA decay
pathway"Am J Hum Genet. 2004 May;74(5):917-30. Epub 2004 Apr 09).
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