Center for Human Genetics, University Hospitals Leuven, 3000 Leuven, Belgium; Laboratory for the Genetics of Cognition, Department of Human Genetics, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, 3000 Leuven, Belgium.
Genome Damage and Stability Centre, University of Sussex, BN1 9RQ Sussex, UK.
Am J Hum Genet. 2019 May 2;104(5):957-967. doi: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.03.006. Epub 2019 Apr 18.
Replicating the human genome efficiently and accurately is a daunting challenge involving the duplication of upward of three billion base pairs. At the core of the complex machinery that achieves this task are three members of the B family of DNA polymerases: DNA polymerases α, δ, and ε. Collectively these multimeric polymerases ensure DNA replication proceeds at optimal rates approaching 2 × 10 nucleotides/min with an error rate of less than one per million nucleotides polymerized. The majority of DNA replication of undamaged DNA is conducted by DNA polymerases δ and ε. The DNA polymerase α-primase complex performs limited synthesis to initiate the replication process, along with Okazaki-fragment synthesis on the discontinuous lagging strand. An increasing number of human disorders caused by defects in different components of the DNA-replication apparatus have been described to date. These are clinically diverse and involve a wide range of features, including variable combinations of growth delay, immunodeficiency, endocrine insufficiencies, lipodystrophy, and cancer predisposition. Here, by using various complementary approaches, including classical linkage analysis, targeted next-generation sequencing, and whole-exome sequencing, we describe distinct missense and splice-impacting mutations in POLA1 in five unrelated families presenting with an X-linked syndrome involving intellectual disability, proportionate short stature, microcephaly, and hypogonadism. POLA1 encodes the p180 catalytic subunit of DNA polymerase α-primase. A range of replicative impairments could be demonstrated in lymphoblastoid cell lines derived from affected individuals. Our findings describe the presentation of pathogenic mutations in a catalytic component of a B family DNA polymerase member, DNA polymerase α.
有效地、准确地复制人类基因组是一项艰巨的挑战,涉及到超过三十亿个碱基对的复制。在实现这一任务的复杂机器的核心是 DNA 聚合酶 B 家族的三个成员:DNA 聚合酶α、δ 和ε。这些多聚酶共同确保 DNA 复制以最佳速率进行,接近 2×10 个核苷酸/分钟,聚合错误率低于每百万个核苷酸一个。未受损 DNA 的大部分 DNA 复制由 DNA 聚合酶δ和ε进行。DNA 聚合酶α-引物酶复合物进行有限的合成以启动复制过程,同时在不连续的滞后链上进行冈崎片段合成。迄今为止,已经描述了越来越多的由 DNA 复制装置的不同组件缺陷引起的人类疾病。这些疾病在临床上多种多样,涉及广泛的特征,包括生长迟缓、免疫缺陷、内分泌不足、脂肪营养不良和癌症易感性等可变组合。在这里,我们通过使用各种互补方法,包括经典连锁分析、靶向下一代测序和全外显子组测序,描述了五个无关家族中 POLA1 中的不同错义和剪接影响突变,这些家族表现出涉及智力残疾、成比例身材矮小、小头畸形和性腺功能减退的 X 连锁综合征。POLA1 编码 DNA 聚合酶α-引物酶的 p180 催化亚基。可以在受影响个体的淋巴母细胞系中证明一系列复制损伤。我们的发现描述了 B 家族 DNA 聚合酶成员 DNA 聚合酶α的催化组分中致病性突变的表现。