Abstract

The DMD gene is one of the largest human genes, being composed of 79 exons, and encodes dystrophin Dp427m which is deficient in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). In some DMD patient, however, small size dystrophin reacting with antibody to N-terminal but not to C-terminal has been identified. The mechanism to produce N-terminal small size dystrophin remains unknown. Intronic polyadenylation is a mechanism that produces a transcript with a new 3′ terminal exon and a C-terminal truncated protein. In this study, intronic alternative polyadenylation was disclosed to occur in the middle of the DMD gene and produce the half-size N-terminal dystrophin Dp427m, Dpm234. The 3′-rapid amplification of cDNA ends revealed 421 bp sequence in the downstream of DMD exon 41 in U-251 glioblastoma cells. The cloned sequence composing of the 5′ end sequence of intron 41 was decided as the terminal exon, since it encoded poly (A) signal followed by poly (A) stretch. Subsequently, a fragment from DMD exon M1 to intron 41 was obtained by PCR amplification. This product was named Dpm234 after its molecular weight. However, Dpm234 was not PCR amplified in human skeletal and cardiac muscles. Remarkably, Dpm234 was PCR amplified in iPS-derived cardiomyocytes. Accordingly, Western blotting of cardiomyocyte proteins showed a band of 234 kDa reacting with dystrophin antibody to N-terminal, but not C-terminal. Clinically, DMD patients with mutations in the Dpm234 coding region were found to have a significantly higher likelihood of two ECG abnormal findings. Intronic alternative splicing was first revealed in Dp427m to produce small size dystrophin.

Highlights

  • The Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) gene is one the largest genes in humans and spans over 2400 kb on the X-chromosome composing of 79 exons

  • This study showed that the DMD gene expressed a novel transcript resulting from post-transcriptional intronic polyadenylation

  • Dpm234 deficiency was associated with two ECG abnormalities in a large cohort of DMD patients

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Summary

Introduction

The DMD gene is one the largest genes in humans and spans over 2400 kb on the X-chromosome composing of 79 exons. DMD is characterized by dystrophin Dp427m deficiency in skeletal muscle. Nearly half of DMD patients have been reported to express small size dystrophin reactive with dystrophin antibody to N-terminus, but not to C-terminus [1]. A half-size N-terminal dystrophin fragment was identified in a DMD patient who had deletion of exons 42 and 43 [2]. These incidents strongly indicated the presence of half-size N-terminal dystrophin, no further study has been conducted on this as far as we know

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