Prandini Paola, Deutsch Samuel, Lyle Robert, Gagnebin Maryline, Delucinge Vivier Celine, Delorenzi Mauro, Gehrig Corinne, Descombes Patrick, Sherman Stephanie, Dagna Bricarelli Franca, Baldo Chiara, Novelli Antonio, Dallapiccola Bruno, Antonarakis Stylianos E
Department of Genetic Medicine and Development, University of Geneva Medical School and University Hospitals of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Am J Hum Genet. 2007 Aug;81(2):252-63. doi: 10.1086/519248. Epub 2007 Jun 20.
Down syndrome (DS) is characterized by extensive phenotypic variability, with most traits occurring in only a fraction of affected individuals. Substantial gene-expression variation is present among unaffected individuals, and this variation has a strong genetic component. Since DS is caused by genomic-dosage imbalance, we hypothesize that gene-expression variation of human chromosome 21 (HSA21) genes in individuals with DS has an impact on the phenotypic variability among affected individuals. We studied gene-expression variation in 14 lymphoblastoid and 17 fibroblast cell lines from individuals with DS and an equal number of controls. Gene expression was assayed using quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction on 100 and 106 HSA21 genes and 23 and 26 non-HSA21 genes in lymphoblastoid and fibroblast cell lines, respectively. Surprisingly, only 39% and 62% of HSA21 genes in lymphoblastoid and fibroblast cells, respectively, showed a statistically significant difference between DS and normal samples, although the average up-regulation of HSA21 genes was close to the expected 1.5-fold in both cell types. Gene-expression variation in DS and normal samples was evaluated using the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. According to the degree of overlap in expression levels, we classified all genes into 3 groups: (A) nonoverlapping, (B) partially overlapping, and (C) extensively overlapping expression distributions between normal and DS samples. We hypothesize that, in each cell type, group A genes are the most dosage sensitive and are most likely involved in the constant DS traits, group B genes might be involved in variable DS traits, and group C genes are not dosage sensitive and are least likely to participate in DS pathological phenotypes. This study provides the first extensive data set on HSA21 gene-expression variation in DS and underscores its role in modulating the outcome of gene-dosage imbalance.
唐氏综合征(DS)的特征是具有广泛的表型变异性,大多数特征仅出现在一部分受影响个体中。未受影响个体之间存在大量基因表达变异,且这种变异具有很强的遗传成分。由于DS是由基因组剂量失衡引起的,我们推测DS个体中人类21号染色体(HSA21)基因的基因表达变异会影响受影响个体之间的表型变异性。我们研究了来自DS个体和数量相等的对照个体的14个淋巴母细胞系和17个成纤维细胞系中的基因表达变异。分别使用定量实时聚合酶链反应检测淋巴母细胞系和成纤维细胞系中100个和106个HSA21基因以及23个和26个非HSA21基因的基因表达。令人惊讶的是,尽管两种细胞类型中HSA21基因的平均上调接近预期的1.5倍,但淋巴母细胞和成纤维细胞中分别只有39%和62%的HSA21基因在DS样本和正常样本之间显示出统计学上的显著差异。使用柯尔莫哥洛夫-斯米尔诺夫检验评估DS样本和正常样本中的基因表达变异。根据表达水平的重叠程度,我们将所有基因分为3组:(A)非重叠组、(B)部分重叠组和(C)正常样本与DS样本之间广泛重叠的表达分布组。我们推测,在每种细胞类型中,A组基因对剂量最敏感,最有可能参与恒定的DS特征,B组基因可能参与可变的DS特征,而C组基因对剂量不敏感,最不可能参与DS病理表型。这项研究提供了关于DS中HSA21基因表达变异的首个广泛数据集,并强调了其在调节基因剂量失衡结果中的作用。