Abstract
The ICF syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive disorder, the most common symptoms of which are immunodeficiency, facial anomalies and cytogenetic defects involving decondensation and instability of chromosome 1, 9 and 16 centromeric regions. ICF is also characterised by significant hypomethylation of the classical satellite DNA, the major constituent of the juxtacentromeric heterochromatin. Here we report the first attempt at analysing some of the defining genetic and epigenetic changes of this syndrome from a nuclear architecture perspective. In particular, we have compared in ICF (Type 1 and Type 2) and controls the large-scale organisation of chromosome 1 and 16 juxtacentromeric heterochromatic regions, their intra-nuclear positioning, and co-localisation with five specific genes (BTG2, CNN3, ID3, RGS1, F13A1), on which we have concurrently conducted expression and methylation analysis. Our investigations, carried out by a combination of molecular and cytological techniques, demonstrate the existence of specific and quantifiable differences in the genomic and nuclear organisation of the juxtacentromeric heterochromatin in ICF. DNA hypomethylation, previously reported to correlate with the decondensation of centromeric regions in metaphase described in these patients, appears also to correlate with the heterochromatin spatial configuration in interphase. Finally, our findings on the relative positioning of hypomethylated satellite sequences and abnormally expressed genes suggest a connection between disruption of long-range gene-heterochromatin associations and some of the changes in gene expression in ICF. Beyond its relevance to the ICF syndrome, by addressing fundamental principles of chromosome functional organisation within the cell nucleus, this work aims to contribute to the current debate on the epigenetic impact of nuclear architecture in development and disease.
Highlights
The Immunodeficiency, Centromeric region instability and Facial anomalies (ICF) syndrome (OMIM 242860) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder often fatal in childhood [1]
Lymphoblastoid cell lines generated from ICF patients show high frequencies of the same karyotypic abnormalities as those observed in mitogen-stimulated lymphocytes [5,6]
The large-scale organisation of chromosome 1 juxtacentromeric heterochromatin is altered in ICF B-cells
Summary
The Immunodeficiency, Centromeric region instability and Facial anomalies (ICF) syndrome (OMIM 242860) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder often fatal in childhood [1]. The ICF syndrome is characterised by phenotypic and clinical variability, with the most consistent features being reduction in serum immunoglobulin (Ig) levels, developmental delay, facial anomalies and cytogenetic defects. Cytogenetic defects of diagnostic significance principally involve decondensation of the juxtacentromeric (or centromere adjacent) heterochromatic regions of chromosomes 1 and 16, and to a lesser extent chromosome 9. In mitogen-stimulated lymphocytes, a wide array of aberrations can be observed, ranging from greatly stretched heterochromatic regions to multiradiate chromosomes. Chromosome fusion in the ICF syndrome occurs only at regions of decondensed centromere-adjacent heterochromatin, and the alpha satellite repeats, the main component of centromeres, always remain outside the regions of multiradiate chromosome fusions [3,4]. Lymphoblastoid cell lines generated from ICF patients show high frequencies of the same karyotypic abnormalities as those observed in mitogen-stimulated lymphocytes [5,6]
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