Germline variants in UHRF1 are associated with multilocus imprinting disturbance in humans and mice

Abstract

The investigation of congenital imprinting disorders (CIDs) provides opportunities to elucidate the molecular mechanisms and role of genomic imprinting in development and human disease. Beckwith–Wiedemann spectrum (BWSp) is a prototypic CID resulting from genetic and epigenetic alterations of imprinted genes at chromosome 11p15.5. In up to a quarter of individuals with BWSp, the epigenetic alterations are not confined to 11p15.5 imprinting control regions but also involve other imprinted gene clusters (multilocus imprinting disturbance; MLID). In a consanguineous family with two children diagnosed with BWSp and MLID, the affected individuals were homozygous for a missense variant in UHRF1 , a gene previously implicated in the maintenance of DNA methylation. To investigate whether the UHRF1 c. 2001G>C, p.(Lys667Asn) missense substitution predisposes to abnormal establishment/maintenance of genomic imprinting patterns, a genetically engineered mouse model with a Uhrf1 p.(Lys661Asn) variant was developed. Mice homozygous for the variant born to heterozygous mothers did not display an abnormal phenotype, but homozygotes born to healthy homozygous mothers displayed a range of phenotypes including prenatal lethality. Also, MLID was observed in affected mouse embryos. These findings are consistent with biallelic UHRF1 variants in affected individuals resulting in an autosomal recessively inherited cause of MLID in humans and expand the range of epigenetic disorders associated with UHRF1.

Publication DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2505884122
Divisions: College of Health & Life Sciences > Aston Medical School
Funding Information: This research was cofunded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre (BRC- 1215-20014) and Rosetrees Trust (to E.O., S.L., and E.R.M.), Marie Curie Initial Training Network Award (INGENIUM) (B.L.-L., E.R.M
Additional Information: Copyright © 2025 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND).
Uncontrolled Keywords: methylation,genomic imprinting,congenital imprinting disorder,multilocus imprinting disturbance,inherited
Publication ISSN: 1091-6490
Data Access Statement: The data for the mouse methylation studies underlying this article are available in NCBI/NLM Sequence Read Archive (SRA) submission number SUB11164966 (70). Anonymized human sequencing data are available from the European Genome Phenome Archive<br/>(dataset ID EGAD50000001684) upon publication (https://ega-archive.org/datasets/EGAD50000001684).
Last Modified: 29 Aug 2025 07:27
Date Deposited: 28 Aug 2025 17:06
Full Text Link:
Related URLs: https://www.pna ... pnas.2505884122 (Publisher URL)
https://ega-arc ... EGAD50000001684 (Related URL)
PURE Output Type: Article
Published Date: 2025-08-26
Published Online Date: 2025-08-18
Accepted Date: 2025-05-19
Submitted Date: 2025-03-19
Authors: Ochoa, Eguzkine
Zvetkova, Ilona
Liv Lee, Sunwoo
Takahashi, Nozomi
Lan-Leung, Benoit
Hobson, Emma
Issa, Mahmoud
Yngvadottir, Bryndis
Docquier, France
Rodger, Fay
Foster-Hall, Dounia
Clark, Graeme
Toribio, Ana
Martin, Ezequiel
Bottolo, Leonardo
Ferguson-Smith, Anne C.
Fischle, Wolfgang
Constancia, Miguel
Maher, Eamonn R.

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