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Elevated basal serum tryptase identifies a multisystem disorder associated with increased TPSAB1 copy number.

Jonathan J LyonsXiaomin YuJason D HughesQuang T LeAli JamilYun BaiNancy HoMing ZhaoYihui LiuMichael P O'ConnellNeil N TrivediCeleste NelsonThomas DiMaggioNina JonesHelen MatthewsKatie L LewisAndrew J OlerRyan J CarlsonPeter D ArkwrightCeline HongSherene AgamaTodd M WilsonSofie TuckerYu ZhangJoshua J McElweeMaryland PaoSarah C GloverMarc E RothenbergRobert J HohmanKelly D StoneGeorge H CaugheyTheo HellerDean D MetcalfeBarbara B BieseckerLawrence B SchwartzJoshua D Milner
Published in: Nature genetics (2016)
Elevated basal serum tryptase levels are present in 4-6% of the general population, but the cause and relevance of such increases are unknown. Previously, we described subjects with dominantly inherited elevated basal serum tryptase levels associated with multisystem complaints including cutaneous flushing and pruritus, dysautonomia, functional gastrointestinal symptoms, chronic pain, and connective tissue abnormalities, including joint hypermobility. Here we report the identification of germline duplications and triplications in the TPSAB1 gene encoding α-tryptase that segregate with inherited increases in basal serum tryptase levels in 35 families presenting with associated multisystem complaints. Individuals harboring alleles encoding three copies of α-tryptase had higher basal serum levels of tryptase and were more symptomatic than those with alleles encoding two copies, suggesting a gene-dose effect. Further, we found in two additional cohorts (172 individuals) that elevated basal serum tryptase levels were exclusively associated with duplication of α-tryptase-encoding sequence in TPSAB1, and affected individuals reported symptom complexes seen in our initial familial cohort. Thus, our findings link duplications in TPSAB1 with irritable bowel syndrome, cutaneous complaints, connective tissue abnormalities, and dysautonomia.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • genome wide
  • chronic pain
  • mitochondrial dna
  • irritable bowel syndrome
  • gene expression
  • oxidative stress
  • transcription factor
  • dna damage
  • dna repair
  • patient reported
  • genome wide analysis