PLoS Genetics (Apr 2014)

FRA2A is a CGG repeat expansion associated with silencing of AFF3.

  • Sofie Metsu,
  • Liesbeth Rooms,
  • Jacqueline Rainger,
  • Martin S Taylor,
  • Hemant Bengani,
  • David I Wilson,
  • Chandra Sekhar Reddy Chilamakuri,
  • Harris Morrison,
  • Geert Vandeweyer,
  • Edwin Reyniers,
  • Evelyn Douglas,
  • Geoffrey Thompson,
  • Eric Haan,
  • Jozef Gecz,
  • David R Fitzpatrick,
  • R Frank Kooy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004242
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
p. e1004242

Abstract

Read online

Folate-sensitive fragile sites (FSFS) are a rare cytogenetically visible subset of dynamic mutations. Of the eight molecularly characterized FSFS, four are associated with intellectual disability (ID). Cytogenetic expression results from CGG tri-nucleotide-repeat expansion mutation associated with local CpG hypermethylation and transcriptional silencing. The best studied is the FRAXA site in the FMR1 gene, where large expansions cause fragile X syndrome, the most common inherited ID syndrome. Here we studied three families with FRA2A expression at 2q11 associated with a wide spectrum of neurodevelopmental phenotypes. We identified a polymorphic CGG repeat in a conserved, brain-active alternative promoter of the AFF3 gene, an autosomal homolog of the X-linked AFF2/FMR2 gene: Expansion of the AFF2 CGG repeat causes FRAXE ID. We found that FRA2A-expressing individuals have mosaic expansions of the AFF3 CGG repeat in the range of several hundred repeat units. Moreover, bisulfite sequencing and pyrosequencing both suggest AFF3 promoter hypermethylation. cSNP-analysis demonstrates monoallelic expression of the AFF3 gene in FRA2A carriers thus predicting that FRA2A expression results in functional haploinsufficiency for AFF3 at least in a subset of tissues. By whole-mount in situ hybridization the mouse AFF3 ortholog shows strong regional expression in the developing brain, somites and limb buds in 9.5-12.5dpc mouse embryos. Our data suggest that there may be an association between FRA2A and a delay in the acquisition of motor and language skills in the families studied here. However, additional cases are required to firmly establish a causal relationship.