Abstract

NR3C1, the gene encoding the glucocorticoid receptor, is polymorphic presenting numerous single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) some of which are emerging as leading cause in the variability of manifestation and/or response to glucocorticoids in human diseases. Since 60–80% of patients with Diamond Blackfan anemia (DBA), an inherited pure red cell aplasia induced by mutations in ribosomal protein genes became transfusion independent upon treatment with glucocorticoids, we investigated whether clinically relevant NR3C1 SNPs are associated with disease manifestation in DBA. The eight SNPs rs10482605, rs10482616, rs7701443, rs6189/rs6190, rs860457, rs6198, rs6196, and rs33388/rs33389 were investigated in a cohort of 91 European DBA patients. Results were compared with those observed in healthy volunteers (n=37) or present in public genome databases of Italian and European populations. Although, cases vs. control analyses suggest that the frequency of some of the minor alleles is significantly altered in DBA patients with respect to healthy controls or to the Italian or other European registries, lack of consistency among the associations across different sets suggests that overall the frequency of these SNPs in DBA is not different from that of the general population. Demographic data (47 females and 31 males) and driver mutations (44 S and 29 L genes and eight no-known mutation) are known for 81 patients while glucocorticoid response is known, respectively, for 81 (36 responsive and 45 non-responsive) and age of disease onsets for 79 (55 before and 24 after 4months of age) patients. Neither gender nor leading mutations were associated with the minor alleles or with disease manifestation. In addition, none of the SNPs met the threshold in the response vs. non-responsive groups. However, two SNPs (rs6196 and rs860457) were enriched in patients manifesting the disease before 4months of age. Although the exact biomechanistical consequences of these SNPs are unknown, the fact that their configuration is consistent with that of regulatory regions suggests that they regulate changes in glucocorticoid response during ontogeny. This hypothesis was supported by phosphoproteomic profiling of erythroid cells expanded ex vivo indicating that glucocorticoids activate a ribosomal signature in cells from cord blood but not in those from adult blood, possibly providing a compensatory mechanism to the driving mutations observed in DBA before birth.

Highlights

  • Diamond Blackfan anemia (DBA) is an inherited bone marrow failure syndrome (Vlachos et al, 2008)

  • Clinical Characteristics of Cohort of DBA Patients Included in the Study

  • Other limitations which may have weakened the power of the statistical analyses include incomplete patient demographic information for some patients, and some SNP genotypes were unavailable

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Summary

Introduction

Diamond Blackfan anemia (DBA) is an inherited bone marrow failure syndrome (Vlachos et al, 2008). Disease manifestation includes normochromic macrocytic anemia, reticulocytopenia, limited cytopenia of other lineages, and a visible paucity of erythroid precursor cells in the bone marrow. The mutations are loss of function and cause ribosomal stress in erythroid progenitors, whose consequences are decrease of general and specific protein synthesis (including genes essential for erythroid differentiation; Dutt et al, 2011; Horos et al, 2012; Moniz et al, 2012; Ludwig et al, 2014; Aspesi et al, 2017) and activation of apoptosis through p53-dependent and p53-independent mechanisms (Fumagalli et al, 2009; Aspesi et al, 2014; Ellis, 2014)

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