Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Dystrophin Nonsense Mutations Can Generate Alternative Rescue Transcripts in Lymphocytes

23

Citations

27

References

2008

Year

Abstract

Secondary alterations in splicing have been reported to produce semi-functional mRNA from several nonsense mutations in the dystrophin gene. Disruptions of exonic splicing enhancers by single nucleotide changes are thought to underlie such alterations. The precise frequencies of such nonsense mutation-dependent splicing alterations, however, remain unknown. Here we analyzed the splicing patterns of dystrophin mRNA in lymphocytes from 38 patients with dystrophinopathies due to nonsense mutations in the dystrophin gene. In seven of the cases (18%), we observed partial skipping of the nonsense-encoding exon. Two of the seven cases, however, exhibited complex activation of a nonsense mutation-created splice site, which resulted in the generation of novel transcripts. Examination of cis-regulatory splicing elements through calculation of splicing probability scores and identification of potential splicing enhancer or silencer sequences failed to disclose a single cause for exon skipping. Remarkably, individual differences in splicing patterns were observed for cells from patients with identical nonsense mutations (C.5899C>T). Although five cases produced semi-functional dystrophin mRNAs, only one of these exhibited a mild clinical course. These results provide important insights about targets for exon skipping induced by candidate antisense oligonucleotides and for ribosomal read-through of nonsense mutations.

References

YearCitations

2003

1.6K

2004

685

1989

332

2004

278

2003

172

1991

165

1997

151

2006

122

1995

113

2004

113

Page 1