The effect of premature termination codon mutations on CFTR mRNA abundance in human nasal epithelium and intestinal organoids: a basis for read-through therapies in cystic fibrosis
Clarke, Luka A.; Awatade, Nikhil T.; Felício, Veronica M.; Silva, Iris A.; Calucho, Maite; Pereira, Luisa; Azevedo, Pilar; Cavaco, José; Barreto, Celeste; Bertuzzo, Carmen; Gartner, Silvia; Beekman, Jeffrey; Amaral, Margarida D.
(2019) Human Mutation, volume 40, issue 3, pp. 326 - 334
(Article)
Abstract
A major challenge in cystic fibrosis (CF) research is applying mutation-specific therapy to individual patients with diverse and rare CF transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) genotypes. Read-through agents are currently the most promising approach for Class I mutations that introduce premature termination codons (PTCs) into CFTR mRNA. However, variations in degradation
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of PTC containing transcripts by nonsense mediated decay (NMD) might lower read-through efficacy. Allele specific quantitative real time (qRT)-PCR was used to measure variations in CFTR mRNA abundance for several PTC mutations in respiratory cells and intestinal organoids. The majority of PTC mutations were associated with reduced levels of relative mRNA transcript abundance (∼33% and 26% of total CFTR mRNA in respiratory cells and intestinal organoids, respectively, compared to >50% for non-PTC causing mutations). These levels were generally not affected by PTC mutation type or position, but there could be twofold variations between individuals bearing the same genotype. Most PTC mutations in CFTR are subject to similar levels of NMD, which reduce but do not abolish PTC bearing mRNAs. Measurement of individual NMD levels in intestinal organoids and HNE cells might, therefore, be useful in predicting efficacy of PTC read-through in the context of personalized CFTR modulator therapy.
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Keywords: cystic fibrosis, NMD, personalized therapies, PTC, read-through, Genetics, Genetics(clinical)
ISSN: 1059-7794
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc.
Note: Funding Information: Work supported by UID/MULTI/04046/2013 center grant from FCT/MCTES, Portugal (to BioISI) and CFF-Cystic Fibrosis Foundation USA research grants to M.D.A. (AMARAL15XX0, AMARAL15XX1-“RNA Life”). V.M.F. and N.T.A. were recipients of PhD fellowships SFRH/BD/87478/2012 and SFRH/PD/BD/52487/2014 (the latter from BioSys PhD programme) from F.C.T., Portugal. The authors thank Maria Manuela Coelho (DBA) for use of Q-PCR machine. The authors also thank Luciana Rezende for cell/RNA/cDNA processing, Funding Information: Work supported by UID/MULTI/04046/2013 center grant from FCT/MCTES, Portugal (to BioISI) and CFF-Cystic Fibrosis Foundation USA research grants to M.D.A. (AMARAL15XX0, AMARAL15XX1-?RNA Life?). V.M.F. and N.T.A. were recipients of PhD fellowships SFRH/BD/87478/2012 and SFRH/PD/BD/52487/2014 (the latter from BioSys PhD programme) from F.C.T., Portugal. The authors thank Maria Manuela Coelho (DBA) for use of Q-PCR machine. The authors also thank Luciana Rezende for cell/RNA/cDNA processing, and Sandra Cabo Verde and Pedro Santos (ITN, Lisboa), for feeder cell irradiation. Publisher Copyright: © 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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