SHP2's gain-of-function in Werner syndrome causes childhood disease onset likely resulting from negative genetic interaction.
Manuela PrioloValentina PalermoFrancesca AielloAndrea CiolfiLuca PannoneValentina MutoMarialetizia MottaCecilia ManciniFrancesca Clementina RadioMarcello NicetaChiara LeoniLetizia PintomalliRosalba CarrozzoGiuseppe RajolaCorrado MammìGiuseppe ZampinoSimone MartinelliBruno DallapiccolaPietro PichierriTartaglia MarcoPublished in: Clinical genetics (2022)
Prompt diagnosis of complex phenotypes is a challenging task in clinical genetics. Whole exome sequencing has proved to be effective in solving such conditions. Here, we report on an unpredictable presentation of Werner Syndrome (WRNS) in a 12-year-old girl carrying a homozygous truncating variant in RECQL2, the gene mutated in WRNS, and a de novo activating missense change in PTPN11, the major Noonan syndrome gene, encoding SHP2, a protein tyrosine phosphatase positively controlling RAS function and MAPK signaling, which have tightly been associated with senescence in primary cells. All the major WRNS clinical criteria were present with an extreme precocious onset and were associated with mild intellectual disability, severe growth retardation and facial dysmorphism. Compared to primary fibroblasts from adult subjects with WRNS, proband's fibroblasts showed a dramatically reduced proliferation rate and competence, and a more accelerated senescence, in line with the anticipated WRNS features occurring in the child. In vitro functional characterization of the SHP2 mutant documented its hyperactive behavior and a significantly enhanced activation of the MAPK pathway. Based on the functional interaction of WRN and MAPK signaling in processes relevant to replicative senescence, these findings disclose a unique phenotype likely resulting from negative genetic interaction.
Keyphrases
- signaling pathway
- intellectual disability
- genome wide
- induced apoptosis
- copy number
- stress induced
- case report
- dna damage
- autism spectrum disorder
- oxidative stress
- pi k akt
- endothelial cells
- wild type
- mental health
- cell cycle arrest
- climate change
- dna methylation
- gene expression
- extracellular matrix
- childhood cancer
- small molecule
- cell death
- protein protein
- soft tissue