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DNA polymerase epsilon deficiency causes IMAGe syndrome with variable immunodeficiency

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posted on 2025-05-08, 22:26 authored by Clare V. Logan, Jennie E. Murray, David A. Parry, Andrea Robertson, Roberto Bellelli, Žygimantė Tarnauskaitė, Rachel Challis, Louise Cleal, Valerie Borel, Adeline Fluteau, Javier Santoyo-Lopez, Timothy J. Aitman, Andrew V. Biankin, Susanna L. Cooke, Wendy Inglis Humphrey, Sacha Martin, Lynne Mennie, Alison Meynert, Zosia Miedzybrodzka, Fiona Murphy, Himanshu GoelHimanshu Goel
During genome replication, polymerase epsilon (Pol ε) acts as the major leading-strand DNA polymerase. Here we report the identification of biallelic mutations in POLE, encoding the Pol ε catalytic subunit POLE1, in 15 individuals from 12 families. Phenotypically, these individuals had clinical features closely resembling IMAGe syndrome (intrauterine growth restriction [IUGR], metaphyseal dysplasia, adrenal hypoplasia congenita, and genitourinary anomalies in males), a disorder previously associated with gain-of-function mutations in CDKN1C. POLE1-deficient individuals also exhibited distinctive facial features and variable immune dysfunction with evidence of lymphocyte deficiency. All subjects shared the same intronic variant (c.1686+32C>G) as part of a common haplotype, in combination with different loss-of-function variants in trans. The intronic variant alters splicing, and together the biallelic mutations lead to cellular deficiency of Pol ε and delayed S-phase progression. In summary, we establish POLE as a second gene in which mutations cause IMAGe syndrome. These findings add to a growing list of disorders due to mutations in DNA replication genes that manifest growth restriction alongside adrenal dysfunction and/or immunodeficiency, consolidating these as replisome phenotypes and highlighting a need for future studies to understand the tissue-specific development roles of the encoded proteins.

History

Journal title

American Journal of Human Genetics

Volume

103

Issue

6

Pagination

1038-1044

Publisher

Cell Press

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Health and Medicine

School

School of Medicine and Public Health

Rights statement

© 2018 The Authors. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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