Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine (Sep 2020)

Aberrant X chromosomal rearrangement through multi‐step template switching during sister chromatid formation in a patient with severe hemophilia A

  • Mahiru Tokoro,
  • Shogo Tamura,
  • Nobuaki Suzuki,
  • Misaki Kakihara,
  • Yuna Hattori,
  • Koya Odaira,
  • Sachiko Suzuki,
  • Akira Takagi,
  • Akira Katsumi,
  • Fumihiko Hayakawa,
  • Shuichi Okamoto,
  • Atsuo Suzuki,
  • Takeshi Kanematsu,
  • Tadashi Matsushita,
  • Tetsuhito Kojima

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/mgg3.1390
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 9
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Background Hemophilia A (HA) is an X‐linked recessive bleeding disorder caused by pathogenic variants of the coagulation factor VIII gene (F8). Half of the patients with severe HA have a recurrent inversion in the X chromosome, that is, F8 intron 22 or intron 1 inversion. Here, we characterized an abnormal F8 due to atypical complex X chromosome rearrangements in a Japanese patient with severe HA. Methods Recurrent F8 inversions were tested with inverse shifting‐PCR. The genomic structure was investigated using PCR‐based direct sequencing or quantitative PCR. Results The proband's X chromosome had a 119.5 kb insertion, a reverse duplex of an extragenic sequence on the F8 telomere region into the F8 intron 1 with two breakpoints. The telomeric breakpoint was a joining from the F8 intron 1 to the inverted FUNDC2 via a two‐base microhomology, and the centromeric breakpoint was a recombination between F8 intron 1 homologous sequences. The rearrangement mechanism was suggested as a multi‐step rearrangement with template switching such as fork stalling and template switching (FoSTeS)/microhomology‐mediated break‐induced replication (MMBIR) and/or homologous sequence‐associated recombination during a sister chromatid formation. Conclusion We identified the aberrant X chromosome with a split F8 due to a multi‐step rearrangement in a patient with severe HA.

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