Abstract

Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) is an inherited dominant muscular dystrophy caused by expanded CTG·CAG triplet repeats in the 3' untranslated region of the DMPK1 gene, which produces a toxic gain-of-function CUG RNA. It has been shown that the severity of disease symptoms, age of onset and progression are related to the length of the triplet repeats. However, the mechanism(s) of CTG·CAG triplet-repeat instability is not fully understood. Herein, induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) were generated from DM1 and Huntington's disease patient fibroblasts. We isolated 41 iPSC clones from DM1 fibroblasts, all showing different CTG·CAG repeat lengths, thus demonstrating somatic instability within the initial fibroblast population. During propagation of the iPSCs, the repeats expanded in a manner analogous to the expansion seen in somatic cells from DM1 patients. The correlation between repeat length and expansion rate identified the interval between 57 and 126 repeats as being an important length threshold where expansion rates dramatically increased. Moreover, longer repeats showed faster triplet-repeat expansion. However, the overall tendency of triplet repeats to expand ceased on differentiation into differentiated embryoid body or neurospheres. The mismatch repair components MSH2, MSH3 and MSH6 were highly expressed in iPSCs compared with fibroblasts, and only occupied the DMPK1 gene harboring longer CTG·CAG triplet repeats. In addition, shRNA silencing of MSH2 impeded CTG·CAG triplet-repeat expansion. The information gained from these studies provides new insight into a general mechanism of triplet-repeat expansion in iPSCs.

Highlights

  • IntroductionMore than 30 hereditary diseases in humans are caused by expansion of a simple triplet-repeat sequences in genomic DNA, such as CTG.CAG (and the reverse orientation, CAG.CTG), GAA.TTC and CGG.CCG [1,2]

  • More than 30 hereditary diseases in humans are caused by expansion of a simple triplet-repeat sequences in genomic DNA, such as CTG.CAG, GAA.TTC and CGG.CCG [1,2]

  • In our previous studies [29,30], we showed that GAA.TTC triplet repeats are highly unstable in Freidreich ataxia (FRDA) induced pluripotent stem cells and that their expansion involves the highly active mismatch repair system

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Summary

Introduction

More than 30 hereditary diseases in humans are caused by expansion of a simple triplet-repeat sequences in genomic DNA, such as CTG.CAG (and the reverse orientation, CAG.CTG), GAA.TTC and CGG.CCG [1,2]. These expanded triplet-repeat sequences are unstable and frequently change in length during intergenerational transmission and within somatic cells. Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) patients may have between 50 and 5000 triplet repeats in their pathogenic allele, while Huntington’s disease (HD) patients harbor between 38 and 180 repeats [3]. DM1 is an inherited autosomal dominant muscular dystrophy caused by expanded CTG.CAG triplet repeats in the

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