Mandibular hypoplasia, Deafness and Progeroid features with concomitant Lipodystrophy define a rare systemic disorder, named MDPL Syndrome, due to almost de novo variant in POLD1 gene, encoding the DNA polymerase δ. We report a MDPL female heterozygote for p.Ser605del variant. In order to deepen the functional role of the in frame deletion affecting the polymerase catalytic subunit of the protein, cellular phenotype has been characterised. MDPL fibroblasts exhibit in vitro nuclear envelope anomalies, accumulation of prelamin A and presence of micronuclei. A decline of cell growth, cellular senescence and a blockage of proliferation in G0/G1 phase complete the aged cellular picture. The evaluation of the genomic instability reveals a basal DNA double strand damage and a delayed recovery from DNA induced-damage. Moreover, the rate of telomere shortening was greater in pathological cells, suggesting the telomere dysfunction as an emerging key feature in MDPL. Our results suggest an alteration in DNA replication/repair function of POLD1 as a primary pathogenetic cause of MDPL. The understanding of the mechanisms linking these cellular characteristics to the accelerated aging and to the wide spectrum of affected tissues and clinical symptoms in the MDPL patients may provide opportunities to develop therapeutic treatments for progeroid syndromes.
Characterization of the pathogenetic role of POLD1 gene in mandibular hypoplasia, deafness, progeroid features and lipodystrophy (MDPL) syndrome
DE MASI, CLAUDIA
2021
Abstract
Mandibular hypoplasia, Deafness and Progeroid features with concomitant Lipodystrophy define a rare systemic disorder, named MDPL Syndrome, due to almost de novo variant in POLD1 gene, encoding the DNA polymerase δ. We report a MDPL female heterozygote for p.Ser605del variant. In order to deepen the functional role of the in frame deletion affecting the polymerase catalytic subunit of the protein, cellular phenotype has been characterised. MDPL fibroblasts exhibit in vitro nuclear envelope anomalies, accumulation of prelamin A and presence of micronuclei. A decline of cell growth, cellular senescence and a blockage of proliferation in G0/G1 phase complete the aged cellular picture. The evaluation of the genomic instability reveals a basal DNA double strand damage and a delayed recovery from DNA induced-damage. Moreover, the rate of telomere shortening was greater in pathological cells, suggesting the telomere dysfunction as an emerging key feature in MDPL. Our results suggest an alteration in DNA replication/repair function of POLD1 as a primary pathogenetic cause of MDPL. The understanding of the mechanisms linking these cellular characteristics to the accelerated aging and to the wide spectrum of affected tissues and clinical symptoms in the MDPL patients may provide opportunities to develop therapeutic treatments for progeroid syndromes.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
input.pdf
accesso solo da BNCF e BNCR
Dimensione
2.77 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
2.77 MB | Adobe PDF |
I documenti in UNITESI sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14242/208642
URN:NBN:IT:UNIROMA2-208642