Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine (Jun 2022)

Intron retention by a novel intronic mutation in DKC1 gene caused recurrent still birth and early death in a Chinese family

  • Qiufang Guo,
  • Ping Zhang,
  • Wenjing Ying,
  • Yaqiong Wang,
  • Jitao Zhu,
  • Gang Li,
  • Huijun Wang,
  • Xiaochuan Wang,
  • Caixia Lei,
  • Wenhao Zhou,
  • Jinqiao Sun,
  • Bingbing Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/mgg3.1934
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Background DKC1, the dyskerin encoding gene, functions in telomerase activity and telomere maintenance. DKC1 mutations cause a multisystem disease, dyskeratosis congenita (DC), which is associated with immunodeficiency and bone marrow failure. Methods In this research, we reported a novel intronic mutation of DKC1 causing dyskerin functional loss in a Chinese family. Whole exome sequence (WES) of the proband and validation by sanger sequencing help us identify a pathogenic DKC1 mutation. Minigene splicing assays were performed to evaluate functional change of DKC1. Results A pathogenic DKC1 intronic mutation(c.84 + 7A > G) was identified in the proband, which was inherited from heterozygous mother and not reported before. We detected the novel transcript with a 7 bp intron retention through minigene splicing assay. The newly spliced transcript is so short that would be degraded by nonsense‐mediated mRNA decay in vitro and we infer that the novel DKC1 mutation would influences normal physiological function of dyskerin. Conclusions Our study identified a novel intronic mutation, which expands the spectrum of pathogenic DKC1 gene mutations and can be used in molecular diagnosis. The mutant allele was transmitted to the next generation with high frequency in the family and causes still birth or early death.

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