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Tangui Le Guen, Laurent Jullien, Fabien Touzot, Michael Schertzer, Laetitia Gaillard, Mylène Perderiset, Wassila Carpentier, Patrick Nitschke, Capucine Picard, Gérard Couillault, Jean Soulier, Alain Fischer, Isabelle Callebaut, Nada Jabado, Arturo Londono-Vallejo, Jean-Pierre de Villartay, Patrick Revy, Human RTEL1 deficiency causes Hoyeraal–Hreidarsson syndrome with short telomeres and genome instability, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 22, Issue 16, 15 August 2013, Pages 3239–3249, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddt178
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Abstract
Hoyeraal–Hreidarsson syndrome (HHS), a severe variant of dyskeratosis congenita (DC), is characterized by early onset bone marrow failure, immunodeficiency and developmental defects. Several factors involved in telomere length maintenance and/or protection are defective in HHS/DC, underlining the relationship between telomere dysfunction and these diseases. By combining whole-genome linkage analysis and exome sequencing, we identified compound heterozygous RTEL1 (regulator of telomere elongation helicase 1) mutations in three patients with HHS from two unrelated families. RTEL1 is a DNA helicase that participates in DNA replication, DNA repair and telomere integrity. We show that, in addition to short telomeres, RTEL1-deficient cells from patients exhibit hallmarks of genome instability, including spontaneous DNA damage, anaphase bridges and telomeric aberrations. Collectively, these results identify RTEL1 as a novel HHS-causing gene and highlight its role as a genomic caretaker in humans.
- congenital abnormality
- genetic linkage analysis
- mutation
- mitotic anaphase
- dna damage
- dna helicases
- dna repair
- dna replication
- dyskeratosis congenita
- genes
- genome
- heterozygote
- immunologic deficiency syndromes
- pancytopenia
- telomere
- united states dept. of health and human services
- telomere shortening
- genomic instability
- telomere maintenance
- personal integrity
- whole exome sequencing
- brip1 gene