News Release

Discovery of a gene that controls 3 different diseases

The gene could also be involved in breast and ovarian cancer

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona

Dr. Jordi Surrallés, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona

image: This is the leader of the research team, Dr. Jordi Surrallés, at UAB. view more 

Credit: Pierre Caufapé/UAB

An international research consortium led by the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB), the CIBERER and the University of Wurzburg (Germany) has discovered a gene that can cause three totally different diseases, depending on how it is altered.

The researchers, using next-generation massive ultrasequencing techniques, have sequenced the over 20,000 genes of a Fanconi anaemia patient's genome. By adopting this strategy they have succeeded in identifying pathogenic mutations responsible for this disease in the ERCC4 gene, which had already been linked to two other rare diseases: xeroderma pigmentosum and a type of progeria. The latter are characterised by heightened sensitivity to sunlight, susceptibility to skin cancer and, in the case of progeria, premature aging. Fanconi anaemia, on the other hand, is characterised by progressive anaemia, congenital malformations and a high risk of developing leukaemia and mouth tumours. The ERCC4 gene can therefore be responsible for three different diseases.

The researchers have shown that this gene is involved in two DNA repair mechanisms by which cells maintain the stability of the genome, in such a way that the balance between these two repair systems will determine which of the three diseases the patient will contract. "This is a rather exceptional case, since there are few precedents of a single gene being involved in two independent physiological mechanisms and causing three clinically different diseases", points out UAB professor Dr Jordi Surrallés.

These findings, published today in the "American Journal of Human Genetics", as well as improving the diagnosis and genetic characterisation of rare diseases, will allow new therapeutic strategies to be applied, like gene therapy or the selection of healthy, compatible embryos to cure siblings through umbilical cord transplants. The findings add to our knowledge of the two DNA repair mechanisms, which are so important for maintaining the stability of our genes and preventing cancer in the general population. In fact, the researchers point to the importance of going on to study this gene's possible role in breast cancer and ovarian cancer.

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The study was co-directed by Dr. Jordi Surrallés, a UAB professor and researcher with the Biomedical Research Network on Rare Diseases (CIBERER) and Dr. Detlev Schindler, a professor at the University of Wurzburg. Participating in it were researchers from the VU University Medical Center (Netherlands), the Erasmus University of Rotterdam (Netherlands), Stony Brook University (New York, USA), the CNIO and the CIEMAT in Madrid, and the company Sistemas Genómicos, based in Valencia. The lead author, Massimo Bogliolo, is a researcher at the CIBERER and a lecturer at the UAB, attached to Dr. Surrallés group.


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