Somatic mosaicism for maternal uniparental disomy 15 in a girl with Prader-Willi syndrome: Confirmation by cell cloning and identification of candidate downstream genes

Berndard Horsthemke*, Hülya Nazlican, Johannes Hüsing, Ludger Klein-Hitpaß, Uwe Claussen, Susanne Michel, Christina Lich, Gabriele Gillessen-Kaesbach, Karin Buiting

*Corresponding author for this work
30 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Although uniparental disomy often results from the postzygotic rescue of a meiotic non-disjunction event, mosaicism is usually confined to the placenta. We describe a girl with Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) who is mosaic for normal cells and cells with maternal uniparental disomy 15 [upd(15)mat] in blood and skin. Somatic mosaicism was confirmed by cloning and genotyping of skin fibroblasts. X inactivation studies indicated that upd occurred prior to X inactivation. RNA samples from the cloned cells were used in DNA microarray experiments to study the effect of upd(15)mat on the gene expression pattern of fibroblasts. Proof of principle was obtained by detecting several chromosome 15 genes known to be imprinted. We did not obtain any evidence for novel 15q genes showing imprinted expression in fibroblasts. Differentially expressed genes on other chromosomes are candidates for downstream genes regulated by an imprinted gene and may play a role in the pathogenesis of PWS. The finding of strongly reduced mRNA levels in upd(15)mat cells of the gene encoding secretogranin II (SCG2), which is a precursor of the dopamine releasing factor secretoneurin, raises the question whether hyperphagia in patients with PWS might be due to a defect in dopamine-modulated food reward circuits.

Original languageEnglish
JournalHuman Molecular Genetics
Volume12
Issue number20
Pages (from-to)2723-2732
Number of pages10
ISSN0964-6906
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15.10.2003

Research Areas and Centers

  • Research Area: Medical Genetics

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