TERT c.3150 G > C (p.K1050N): a founder Ashkenazi Jewish variant associated with telomere biology disorders.

Journal: NPJ Genomic Medicine
Published:
Abstract

Pathogenic germline variants in telomerase (TERT) cause telomere biology disorders (TBDs) and are associated with bone marrow failure, pulmonary fibrosis, and other complications. TERT c.3150 G > C (p.K1050N) is frequent in the Ashkenazi Jewish (ASH) population and has been identified in ASH families with TBDs. Whole-genome sequencing of 96 p.K1050N heterozygotes from the UK Biobank and All of Us databases revealed a shared haplotype block, supporting a founder effect. Analyses of 15 additional p.K1050N cases validated this haplotype and identified mitochondrial and Y-STR haplogroups consistent with ASH ancestry. Clinical assessments showed that p.K1050N contributes to TBD phenotypes and shortened telomeres, while population data suggest incomplete penetrance. p.K1050N reduces telomerase activity and processivity, and decreases PCNA expression and BrdU incorporation, impairing cell proliferation. Our findings establish TERT p.K1050N as an ASH founder variant associated with TBDs, underscoring the need for genetic screening and long-term clinical studies.

Authors
Kelvin De Andrade, Emilia Pinto, Tianna Zhao, Logan Zeigler, Jung Kim, Neelam Giri, Jeremy Haley, Lisa Mcreynolds, Oscar Florez Vargas, Aaron Phillips, Richard Kriwacki, Sherifa Akinniyi, Scott Cohen, Matthew Emerson, Diane Smelser, Gretchen Urban, Cintia Fridman, Gerard Zambetti, Tracy Bryan, David Carey, Christine Garcia, Douglas Stewart, Sharon Savage
Relevant Conditions

Pulmonary Fibrosis