Spotlight on Warsaw Breakage Syndrome.

Appl Clin Genet

Istituto di Biochimica e Biologia Cellulare, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Naples 80131, Italy.

Published: December 2019

Warsaw breakage syndrome (WABS) is a very rare recessive hereditary disease caused by mutations in the gene coding for the DNA helicase DDX11, involved in genome stability maintenance and sister cohesion establishment. Typical clinical features observed in WABS patients include growth retardation, facial dysmorphia, microcephaly, hearing loss due to cochlear malformations and, at cytological level, sister chromatid cohesion defects. Molecular bases of WABS have not yet been elucidated, due to lack of disease animal model systems and limited knowledge of the DDX11 physiological functions. However, WABS is considered to belong to the group of cohesinopathies, genetic disorders due to mutations of subunits or regulators of cohesin, the protein complex responsible for tethering sister chromatids from the time of their synthesis till they separate in mitosis. Recent evidences suggest that cohesin and its regulators have additional key roles in chromatin organization by promoting the formation of chromatin loops. This "non-canonical" function of cohesin is expected to impact gene transcription during cell differentiation and embryonic development and its dis-regulation, caused by mutation/loss of genes encoding cohesin subunits or regulators, could originate the developmental defects observed in cohesinopathies. Ethiopathogenesis of WABS is discussed in line with these recent findings and evidence of a possible role of DDX11 as a cohesin regulator.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6901054PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/TACG.S186476DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • * To understand the impact of DDX11 loss, researchers used CRISPR gene screening in human cell lines, revealing a significant connection to genes that regulate sister chromatid cohesion.
  • * The study found that DDX11 loss creates a synthetic lethal relationship with the tumor suppressor STAG2 and the kinase HASPIN, suggesting that targeting DDX11 could be beneficial for tumors with STAG2 mutations.
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