Ribosomal, Satellite III (1q12) and Telomere Repeat Copy Number Variations in Cystic Fibrosis Patients Used as a Model of Permanent Stress and Survivability

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Abstract

Introduction

Ribosomal (rDNA), satellite III (f-SatIII) and telomere (TR) tandem repeats perform a variety of functions in the human cell. Copy number variations (CNVs) of these repeats contributes to the global chromatin architecture and genome expression changes in response to stress or pathology. An elevated rDNA abundance and lowered contents of f-SatIII and TR were found in blood leukocytes of patients with schizophrenia. The main question of the study was: are the CNVs of the three repeat types in blood leukocytes a universal phenomenon linked to a patho4logy associated with chronic oxidative stress? Cystic fibrosis (CF), a monogenic disease was chosen as an object of the study.

Materials and Methods

We determined the rDNA, f-SatIII and TR content in the blood leukocyte genomes of 545 subjects aged 0.2 to 50 years. The subjects were divided into three groups: Control (HC-group, N = 267), CF group (N= 186) and CF(d) group (severe patients, who died after some time upon sampling, aged 17 to 40 years, N = 92). For each patient, the type of the mutation in CFTR gene had been determined earlier. Non-radioactive quantitative hybridization technique was applied to quantify the repeats.

Results

the rDNA abundance was elevated in the DNA of CF and CF(d) groups (565±105 copies per genome, N=278) compared to HC group (445±112 copies, N=267). A patient’s age 3 to 16 years was associated with “severe” mutations in CFTR (98% of cases), increased f-SatIII repeat counts and decreased telomere repeat (TR) contents in genome DNA compared to the age-matched controls. The genomes of deceased patients from CF(d) group also harbored increased numbers of f-SatIII and decreased numbers of TR. Patients above 16 years with a milder course of the disease and relatively low content of “severe” CFTR mutations contained less f-SatIII and more TR in their genomic DNA. A parameter rDNA·(f-SatIII/TR) showed a maximum difference between patients with relatively mild (age 17 to 40) and severe (age 17 to 40) forms of the pathology according to ROC analysis data (AUC = 0.86).

Conclusion

Cystic fibrosis was associated with an increase in rDNA abundance and altered f-SatIII and TR contents in the DNA of cases compared to the controls. The severe course of the disease was characterized with high f-SatIII contents and shortened telomeres. Whereas mild CF cases were associated with low contents of f-SatIII and normal or slightly reduced telomere length. The index rDNA· (f-SatIII/TR) might be a predictor of the patient’s life expectancy.

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