Abstract

Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a genetic imprinting disease that causes developmental and behavioral disturbances resulting from loss of expression of genes from the paternal chromosome 15q11-q13 region. In about 70% of subjects, this portion of the paternal chromosome is deleted, while 25% have two copies of the maternal chromosome 15, or uniparental maternal disomy (UPD; the remaining subjects have imprinting center defects. There are several documented physical and behavioral differences between the two major PWS genetic subtypes (deletion and UPD) indicating the genetic subtype plays a role in clinical presentation. Serotonin is known to be disturbed in PWS and affects both eating behavior and compulsion, which are reported to be abnormal in PWS. We investigated the tryptophan hydroxylase gene (TPH2), the rate-limiting enzyme in the production of brain serotonin, by analyzing three different TPH2 gene polymorphisms, transcript expression, and correlation with PWS genetic subtype. DNA and RNA from lymphoblastoid cell lines derived from 12 PWS and 12 comparison subjects were used for the determination of genetic subtype, TPH2 polymorphisms and quantitative RT-PCR analysis. A similar frequency of TPH2 polymorphisms was seen in the PWS and comparison subjects with PWS deletion subjects showing increased expression with one or more TPH2 polymorphism. Both PWS deletion and PWS UPD subjects had significantly lower TPH2 expression than control subjects and PWS deletion subjects had significantly lower TPH2 expression compared with PWS UPD subjects. PWS subjects with 15q11-q13 deletions had lower TPH2 expression compared with PWS UPD or control subjects, requiring replication and further studies to identify the cause including identification of disturbed gene interactions resulting from the deletion process.

Highlights

  • Thirty-seven Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) subjects were originally analyzed for the status of the TPH2 -703G/T single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)

  • No significant difference was seen between PWS and comparison subjects, or between PWS genetic subtypes regarding the frequency of SNPs in the TPH2 gene

  • Electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) analysis revealed that DNA-protein interactions form with the wild-type +90A, indicating an inhibitory element since changing this nucleotide to its G polymorphism causes an increase in gene expression (Chen et al 2008)

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Summary

Objectives

The purpose of the current study is to examine the effect of these SNPs on TPH2 gene expression levels in PWS and control subjects and to determine if there are relevant differences in TPH2 expression between the deletion and UPD genetic subtypes of PWS. It is important to note that previous studies have been performed in differing cell lines using TPH2 plasmid constructs, while the goal of our study was to measure endogenous TPH2 gene expression

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