Investigation of the Wilson gene ATP7B transcriptional start site and the effect of core promoter alterations

Abstract Pathogenic genetic variants in the ATP7B gene cause Wilson disease, a recessive disorder of copper metabolism showing a significant variability in clinical phenotype. Promoter mutations have been rarely reported, and controversial data exist on the site of transcription initiation (the core...

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Main Authors: Clemens Höflich, Angela Brieger, Stefan Zeuzem, Guido Plotz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-04-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-87000-9
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spelling doaj-2df93a0a50b94902ad043546d5a053b72021-04-11T11:33:46ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-04-0111111010.1038/s41598-021-87000-9Investigation of the Wilson gene ATP7B transcriptional start site and the effect of core promoter alterationsClemens Höflich0Angela Brieger1Stefan Zeuzem2Guido Plotz3Biomedical Research Laboratory, 1st Department of Internal Medicine, University HospitalBiomedical Research Laboratory, 1st Department of Internal Medicine, University HospitalBiomedical Research Laboratory, 1st Department of Internal Medicine, University HospitalBiomedical Research Laboratory, 1st Department of Internal Medicine, University HospitalAbstract Pathogenic genetic variants in the ATP7B gene cause Wilson disease, a recessive disorder of copper metabolism showing a significant variability in clinical phenotype. Promoter mutations have been rarely reported, and controversial data exist on the site of transcription initiation (the core promoter). We quantitatively investigated transcription initiation and found it to be located in immediate proximity of the translational start. The effects human single-nucleotide alterations of conserved bases in the core promoter on transcriptional activity were moderate, explaining why clearly pathogenic mutations within the core promoter have not been reported. Furthermore, the core promoter contains two frequent polymorphisms (rs148013251 and rs2277448) that could contribute to phenotypical variability in Wilson disease patients with incompletely inactivating mutations. However, neither polymorphism significantly modulated ATP7B expression in vitro, nor were copper household parameters in healthy probands affected. In summary, the investigations allowed to determine the biologically relevant site of ATP7B transcription initiation and demonstrated that genetic variations in this site, although being the focus of transcriptional activity, do not contribute significantly to Wilson disease pathogenesis.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-87000-9
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Clemens Höflich
Angela Brieger
Stefan Zeuzem
Guido Plotz
spellingShingle Clemens Höflich
Angela Brieger
Stefan Zeuzem
Guido Plotz
Investigation of the Wilson gene ATP7B transcriptional start site and the effect of core promoter alterations
Scientific Reports
author_facet Clemens Höflich
Angela Brieger
Stefan Zeuzem
Guido Plotz
author_sort Clemens Höflich
title Investigation of the Wilson gene ATP7B transcriptional start site and the effect of core promoter alterations
title_short Investigation of the Wilson gene ATP7B transcriptional start site and the effect of core promoter alterations
title_full Investigation of the Wilson gene ATP7B transcriptional start site and the effect of core promoter alterations
title_fullStr Investigation of the Wilson gene ATP7B transcriptional start site and the effect of core promoter alterations
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of the Wilson gene ATP7B transcriptional start site and the effect of core promoter alterations
title_sort investigation of the wilson gene atp7b transcriptional start site and the effect of core promoter alterations
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Pathogenic genetic variants in the ATP7B gene cause Wilson disease, a recessive disorder of copper metabolism showing a significant variability in clinical phenotype. Promoter mutations have been rarely reported, and controversial data exist on the site of transcription initiation (the core promoter). We quantitatively investigated transcription initiation and found it to be located in immediate proximity of the translational start. The effects human single-nucleotide alterations of conserved bases in the core promoter on transcriptional activity were moderate, explaining why clearly pathogenic mutations within the core promoter have not been reported. Furthermore, the core promoter contains two frequent polymorphisms (rs148013251 and rs2277448) that could contribute to phenotypical variability in Wilson disease patients with incompletely inactivating mutations. However, neither polymorphism significantly modulated ATP7B expression in vitro, nor were copper household parameters in healthy probands affected. In summary, the investigations allowed to determine the biologically relevant site of ATP7B transcription initiation and demonstrated that genetic variations in this site, although being the focus of transcriptional activity, do not contribute significantly to Wilson disease pathogenesis.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-87000-9
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