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Defective DNA Polymerase alpha-Primase Leads to X-Linked Intellectual Disability Associated with Severe Growth Retardation, Microcephaly, and Hypogonadism

Abstract

Replicating the human genome efficiently and accurately is a daunting challenge involving the duplication of upward of three billion base pairs. At the core of the complex machinery that achieves this task are three members of the B family of DNA polymerases: DNA polymerases alpha, delta, and epsilon. Collectively these multimeric polymerases ensure DNA replication proceeds at optimal rates approaching 2 x 10(3) nucleotides/min with an error rate of less than one per million nucleotides polymerized. The majority of DNA replication of undamaged DNA is conducted by DNA polymerases delta and epsilon. The DNA polymerase alpha-primase complex performs limited synthesis to initiate the replication process, along with Okazaki-fragment synthesis on the discontinuous lagging strand. An increasing number of human disorders caused by defects in different components of the DNA-replication apparatus have been described to date. These are clinically diverse and involve a wide range of features, including variable combinations of growth delay, immunodeficiency, endocrine insufficiencies, lipodystrophy, and cancer predisposition. Here, by using various complementary approaches, including classical linkage analysis, targeted next-generation sequencing, and whole-exome sequencing, we describe distinct missense and splice-impacting mutations in POLA1 in five unrelated families presenting with an X-linked syndrome involving intellectual disability, proportionate short stature, microcephaly, and hypogonadism. POLA1 encodes the p180 catalytic subunit of DNA polymerase alpha-primase. A range of replicative impairments could be demonstrated in lymphoblastoid cell lines derived from affected individuals. Our findings describe the presentation of pathogenic mutations in a catalytic component of a B family DNA polymerase member, DNA polymerase alpha.

Type Journal
ISBN 1537-6605 (Electronic) 0002-9297 (Linking)
Authors Van Esch, H.; Colnaghi, R.; Freson, K.; Starokadomskyy, P.; Zankl, A.; Backx, L.; Abramowicz, I.; Outwin, E.; Rohena, L.; Faulkner, C.; Leong, G. M.; Newbury-Ecob, R. A.; Challis, R. C.; Ounap, K.; Jaeken, J.; Seuntjens, E.; Devriendt, K.; Burstein, E.; Low, K. J.; O'Driscoll, M.
Responsible Garvan Author Professor Andreas Zankl
Publisher Name American Journal Of Human Genetics
Published Date 2019-05-01
Published Volume 104
Published Issue 5
Published Pages 957-967
Status Published in-print
DOI 10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.03.006
URL link to publisher's version https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31006512
OpenAccess link to author's accepted manuscript version https://publications.gimr.garvan.org.au/open-access/15138