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Two SERPINC1 variants affecting N-glycosylation of Asn224 cause severe thrombophilia not detected by functional assays.

María Eugenia de la Morena-BarrioPierre SuchonEva Marie JacobsenNina IversenAntonia MiñanoBelén De la Morena-BarrioCarlos Bravo-PerezJose PadillaRosa CifuentesSusana AsenjoJean François DeleuzeDavid Alexandre TrégouëtMaría Luisa LozanoVicente VicentePer Morten SandsetPierre-Emmanuel MorangeJavier Corral
Published in: Blood (2022)
Antithrombin deficiency, the most severe congenital thrombophilia, might be underestimated, as some pathogenic variants are not detected by routine functional methods. We have identified 2 new SERPINC1 variants, p.Glu227Lys and p.Asn224His, in 4 unrelated thrombophilic patients with early and recurrent thrombosis that had normal antithrombin activity. In one case, the mutation was identified by whole genome sequencing, while in the 3 remaining cases, the mutation was identified by sequencing SERPINC1 based on a single functional positive finding supporting deficiency. The 2 variants shared a common functional defect, an impaired or null N-glycosylation of Asn224 according to a eukaryotic expression model. Carriers had normal anti-FXa or anti-FIIa activities but impaired anti-FVIIa activity and a detectable loss of inhibitory function when incubating the plasma for 1 hour at 41°C. Moreover, the β glycoform of the variants, lacking 2 N-glycans, had reduced secretion, increased heparin affinity, no inhibitory activity, and a potential dominant-negative effect. These results explain the increased thrombin generation observed in carriers. Mutation experiments reflected the role that Lysine residues close to the N-glycosylation sequon have in impairing the efficacy of N-glycosylation. Our study shows new elements involved in the regulation of N-glycosylation, a key posttranslational modification that, according to our results, affects folding, secretion, and function, providing new evidence of the pathogenic consequence of an incorrect N-glycosylation of antithrombin. This study supports that antithrombin deficiency is underestimated and encourages the development of new functional and genetic tests to diagnose this severe thrombophilia.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • early onset
  • genome wide
  • venous thromboembolism
  • climate change
  • gene expression
  • growth factor
  • risk assessment
  • single cell
  • soft tissue