In Vitro Reactivation of the FMR1 Gene Involved in Fragile X Syndrome

P Chiurazzi, MG Pomponi, R Willemsen… - Human molecular …, 1998 - academic.oup.com
P Chiurazzi, MG Pomponi, R Willemsen, BA Oostra, G Neri
Human molecular genetics, 1998academic.oup.com
Fragile X syndrome is the most frequent cause of heritable mental retardation. Most patients
have a mutation in the 5′ untranslated region of the FMR1 gene, consisting of the
amplification of a polymorphic (CGG) n repeat sequence, and cytogenetically express the
folate-sensitive fragile site FRAXA in Xq27. 3. Fragile X patients harbour an expanded
sequence with> 200 CGG repeats (full mutation), accompanied by methylation of most
cytosines of the sequence itself and of the upstream CpG island. This abnormal …
Abstract
Fragile X syndrome is the most frequent cause of heritable mental retardation. Most patients have a mutation in the 5′ untranslated region of the FMR1 gene, consisting of the amplification of a polymorphic (CGG)n repeat sequence, and cytogenetically express the folate-sensitive fragile site FRAXA in Xq27.3. Fragile X patients harbour an expanded sequence with >200 CGG repeats (full mutation), accompanied by methylation of most cytosines of the sequence itself and of the upstream CpG island. This abnormal hypermethylation of the promoter suppresses gene transcription, resulting in the absence of the FMR1 protein. Rare individuals of normal intelligence were shown to carry a completely or partially unmethylated full mutation and to express the FMR1 protein. Given this observation and knowing that the open reading frame of the mutated FMR1 gene is intact, we decided to investigate whether its activity could be restored in vitro by inducing DNA demethylation with 5-azadeoxycytidine (5-azadC) in fragile X patients' lymphoblastoid cells. We report that treatment with 5-azadC causes reactivation of fully mutated FMR1 genes with 300–800 repeats, as shown by the restoration of specific mRNA and protein production. This effect correlates with the extent of promoter demethylation, determined by restriction analysis with methylation-sensitive enzymes. These results confirm the critical role of FMR1 promoter hypermethylation in the pathogenesis of the fragile X syndrome, provide an additional explanation for the normal IQ of the rare males with unmethylated full mutations and pave the way to future attempts at pharmacologically restoring mutant FMR1 gene activity in vivo.
Oxford University Press