WHSC1, a 90 kb SET Domain-Containing Gene, Expressed in Early Development and Homologous to a Drosophila Dysmorphy Gene Maps in the Wolf-Hirschhorn Syndrome …

I Stec, TJ Wright, GJB van Ommen… - Human molecular …, 1998 - academic.oup.com
I Stec, TJ Wright, GJB van Ommen, PAJ de Boer, A van Haeringen, AFM Moorman
Human molecular genetics, 1998academic.oup.com
Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS) is a malformation syndrome associated with a
hemizygous deletion of the distal short arm of chromosome 4 (4p16. 3). The smallest region
of overlap between WHS patients, the WHS critical region, has been confined to 165 kb, of
which the complete sequence is known. We have identified and studied a 90 kb gene,
designated as WHSC1, mapping to the 165 kb WHS critical region. This 25 exon gene is
expressed ubiquitously in early development and undergoes complex alternative splicing …
Abstract
Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS) is a malformation syndrome associated with a hemizygous deletion of the distal short arm of chromosome 4 (4p16.3). The smallest region of overlap between WHS patients, the WHS critical region, has been confined to 165 kb, of which the complete sequence is known. We have identified and studied a 90 kb gene, designated as WHSC1, mapping to the 165 kb WHS critical region. This 25 exon gene is expressed ubiquitously in early development and undergoes complex alternative splicing and differential polyadenylation. It encodes a 136 kDa protein containing four domains present in other developmental proteins: a PWWP domain, an HMG box, a SET domain also found in the Drosophila dysmorphy gene ash-encoded protein, and a PHD-type zinc finger. It is expressed preferentially in rapidly growing embryonic tissues, in a pattern corresponding to affected organs in WHS patients. The nature of the protein motifs, the expression pattern and its mapping to the critical region led us to propose WHSC1 as a good candidate gene to be responsible for many of the phenotypic features of WHS. Finally, as a serendipitous finding, of the t(4;14) (p16.3;q32.3) translocations recently described in multiple myelomas, at least three breakpoints merge the IgH and WHSC1 genes, potentially causing fusion proteins replacing WHSC1 exons 1–4 by the IgH 5′-VDJ moiety.
Oxford University Press