AI Article Synopsis

  • Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) play a crucial role in gene regulation, but their involvement in human genetic diseases is not well understood.
  • Researchers discovered that deleting a specific lncRNA region on chromosome 2 led to severe congenital limb malformations in humans, including features like shortened limbs and fused digits.
  • The study identified a lncRNA named Maenli, which is essential for activating the engrailed-1 gene during limb development, revealing how mutations in lncRNA can contribute to Mendelian diseases.

Article Abstract

Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) can be important components in gene-regulatory networks, but the exact nature and extent of their involvement in human Mendelian disease is largely unknown. Here we show that genetic ablation of a lncRNA locus on human chromosome 2 causes a severe congenital limb malformation. We identified homozygous 27-63-kilobase deletions located 300 kilobases upstream of the engrailed-1 gene (EN1) in patients with a complex limb malformation featuring mesomelic shortening, syndactyly and ventral nails (dorsal dimelia). Re-engineering of the human deletions in mice resulted in a complete loss of En1 expression in the limb and a double dorsal-limb phenotype that recapitulates the human disease phenotype. Genome-wide transcriptome analysis in the developing mouse limb revealed a four-exon-long non-coding transcript within the deleted region, which we named Maenli. Functional dissection of the Maenli locus showed that its transcriptional activity is required for limb-specific En1 activation in cis, thereby fine-tuning the gene-regulatory networks controlling dorso-ventral polarity in the developing limb bud. Its loss results in the En1-related dorsal ventral limb phenotype, a subset of the full En1-associated phenotype. Our findings demonstrate that mutations involving lncRNA loci can result in human Mendelian disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03208-9DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) play a crucial role in gene regulation, but their involvement in human genetic diseases is not well understood.
  • Researchers discovered that deleting a specific lncRNA region on chromosome 2 led to severe congenital limb malformations in humans, including features like shortened limbs and fused digits.
  • The study identified a lncRNA named Maenli, which is essential for activating the engrailed-1 gene during limb development, revealing how mutations in lncRNA can contribute to Mendelian diseases.
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