Genes (Oct 2022)

Different Mechanisms Cause Hypomethylation of Both <i>H19</i> and <i>KCNQ1OT1</i> Imprinted Differentially Methylated Regions in Two Cases of Silver–Russell Syndrome Spectrum

  • Francesco Passaretti,
  • Laura Pignata,
  • Giuseppina Vitiello,
  • Viola Alesi,
  • Gemma D’Elia,
  • Francesco Cecere,
  • Fabio Acquaviva,
  • Daniele De Brasi,
  • Antonio Novelli,
  • Andrea Riccio,
  • Achille Iolascon,
  • Flavia Cerrato

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes13101875
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
p. 1875

Abstract

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Silver–Russell syndrome is an imprinting disorder characterised by pre- and post-natal growth retardation and several heterogeneous molecular defects affecting different human genomic loci. In the majority of cases, the molecular defect is the loss of methylation (LOM) of the H19/IGF2 differentially methylated region (DMR, also known as IC1) at the telomeric domain of the 11p15.5 imprinted genes cluster, which causes the altered expression of the growth controlling genes, IGF2 and H19. Very rarely, the LOM also affects the KCNQ1OT1 DMR (also known as IC2) at the centromeric domain, resulting in an SRS phenotype by an unknown mechanism. In this study, we report on two cases with SRS features and a LOM of either IC1 and IC2. In one case, this rare and complex epimutation was secondary to a de novo mosaic in cis maternal duplication, involving the entire telomeric 11p15.5 domain and part of the centromeric domain but lacking CDKN1C. In the second case, neither the no 11p15.5 copy number variant nor the maternal-effect subcortical maternal complex (SCMC) variant were found to be associated with the epimutation, suggesting that it arose as a primary event. Our findings further add to the complexity of the molecular genetics of SRS and indicate how the LOM in both 11p15.5 DMRs may result from different molecular mechanisms.

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