Instability of the octarepeat region of the human prion protein gene.

Prion diseases are a family of unique fatal transmissible neurodegenerative diseases that affect humans and many animals. Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) is the most common prion disease in humans, accounting for 85-90% of all human prion cases, and exhibits a high degree of diversity in p...

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Main Authors: Baiya Li, Liuting Qing, Jianqun Yan, Qingzhong Kong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3197570?pdf=render
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author Baiya Li
Liuting Qing
Jianqun Yan
Qingzhong Kong
author_facet Baiya Li
Liuting Qing
Jianqun Yan
Qingzhong Kong
author_sort Baiya Li
collection DOAJ
description Prion diseases are a family of unique fatal transmissible neurodegenerative diseases that affect humans and many animals. Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) is the most common prion disease in humans, accounting for 85-90% of all human prion cases, and exhibits a high degree of diversity in phenotypes. The etiology of sCJD remains to be elucidated. The human prion protein gene has an octapeptide repeat region (octarepeats) that normally contains 5 repeats of 24-27 bp (1 nonapeptide and 4 octapeptide coding sequences). An increase of the octarepeat numbers to six or more or a decrease of the octarepeat number to three is linked to genetic prion diseases with heterogeneous phenotypes in humans. Here we report that the human octarepeat region is prone to either contraction or expansion when subjected to PCR amplification in vitro using Taq or Pwo polymerase and when replicated in wild type E. coli cells. Octarepeat insertion mutants were even less stable, and the mutation rate for the wild type octarepeats was much higher when replicated in DNA mismatch repair-deficient E. coli cells. All observed octarepeat mutants resulting from DNA replication in E. coli were contained in head-to-head plasmid dimers and DNA mfold analysis (http://mfold.rna.albany.edu/?q=mfold/DNA-Folding-Form) indicates that both DNA strands of the octarepeat region would likely form multiple stable hairpin structures, suggesting that the octarepeat sequence may form stable hairpin structures during DNA replication or repair to cause octarepeat instability. These results provide the first evidence supporting a somatic octarepeat mutation-based model for human sCJD etiology: 1) the instability of the octarepeat region leads to accumulation of somatic octarepeat mutations in brain cells during development and aging, 2) this instability is augmented by compromised DNA mismatch repair in aged cells, and 3) eventually some of the octarepeat mutation-containing brain cells start spontaneous de novo prion formation and replication to initiate sCJD.
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spelling doaj.art-f660ba566cfb44209c3b6a3a2ae0c2ba2022-12-22T00:19:25ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-01610e2663510.1371/journal.pone.0026635Instability of the octarepeat region of the human prion protein gene.Baiya LiLiuting QingJianqun YanQingzhong KongPrion diseases are a family of unique fatal transmissible neurodegenerative diseases that affect humans and many animals. Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) is the most common prion disease in humans, accounting for 85-90% of all human prion cases, and exhibits a high degree of diversity in phenotypes. The etiology of sCJD remains to be elucidated. The human prion protein gene has an octapeptide repeat region (octarepeats) that normally contains 5 repeats of 24-27 bp (1 nonapeptide and 4 octapeptide coding sequences). An increase of the octarepeat numbers to six or more or a decrease of the octarepeat number to three is linked to genetic prion diseases with heterogeneous phenotypes in humans. Here we report that the human octarepeat region is prone to either contraction or expansion when subjected to PCR amplification in vitro using Taq or Pwo polymerase and when replicated in wild type E. coli cells. Octarepeat insertion mutants were even less stable, and the mutation rate for the wild type octarepeats was much higher when replicated in DNA mismatch repair-deficient E. coli cells. All observed octarepeat mutants resulting from DNA replication in E. coli were contained in head-to-head plasmid dimers and DNA mfold analysis (http://mfold.rna.albany.edu/?q=mfold/DNA-Folding-Form) indicates that both DNA strands of the octarepeat region would likely form multiple stable hairpin structures, suggesting that the octarepeat sequence may form stable hairpin structures during DNA replication or repair to cause octarepeat instability. These results provide the first evidence supporting a somatic octarepeat mutation-based model for human sCJD etiology: 1) the instability of the octarepeat region leads to accumulation of somatic octarepeat mutations in brain cells during development and aging, 2) this instability is augmented by compromised DNA mismatch repair in aged cells, and 3) eventually some of the octarepeat mutation-containing brain cells start spontaneous de novo prion formation and replication to initiate sCJD.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3197570?pdf=render
spellingShingle Baiya Li
Liuting Qing
Jianqun Yan
Qingzhong Kong
Instability of the octarepeat region of the human prion protein gene.
PLoS ONE
title Instability of the octarepeat region of the human prion protein gene.
title_full Instability of the octarepeat region of the human prion protein gene.
title_fullStr Instability of the octarepeat region of the human prion protein gene.
title_full_unstemmed Instability of the octarepeat region of the human prion protein gene.
title_short Instability of the octarepeat region of the human prion protein gene.
title_sort instability of the octarepeat region of the human prion protein gene
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3197570?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT baiyali instabilityoftheoctarepeatregionofthehumanprionproteingene
AT liutingqing instabilityoftheoctarepeatregionofthehumanprionproteingene
AT jianqunyan instabilityoftheoctarepeatregionofthehumanprionproteingene
AT qingzhongkong instabilityoftheoctarepeatregionofthehumanprionproteingene