Litcius/Paper detail

Dominant TP63 missense variants lead to constitutive activation and premature ovarian insufficiency

Elena J. Tucker, Niklas Gutfreund, Marc‐Antoine Belaud‐Rotureau, David Gilot, Tiffany Brun, Brianna L. Kline, Katrina M. Bell, Mathilde Domin‐Bernhard, Camille Théard, Philippe Touraine, Gorjana Robevska, Jocelyn van van den Bergen, Katie Ayers, Andrew Sinclair, Volker Dötsch, Sylvie Jaillard

2022Human Mutation32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) is a leading form of female infertility, characterised by menstrual disturbance and elevated follicle-stimulating hormone before age 40. It is highly heterogeneous with variants in over 80 genes potentially causative, but the majority of cases having no known cause. One gene implicated in POI pathology is TP63. TP63 encodes multiple p63 isoforms, one of which has been shown to have a role in the surveillance of genetic quality in oocytes. TP63 C-terminal truncation variants and N-terminal duplication have been described in association with POI, however, functional validation has been lacking. Here we identify three novel TP63 missense variants in women with nonsyndromic POI, including one in the N-terminal activation domain, one in the C-terminal inhibition domain, and one affecting a unique and poorly understood p63 isoform, TA*p63. Via blue-native page and luciferase reporter assays we demonstrate that two of these variants disrupt p63 dimerization, leading to constitutively active p63 tetramer that significantly increases the transcription of downstream targets. This is the first evidence that TP63 missense variants can cause isolated POI and provides mechanistic insight that TP63 variants cause POI due to constitutive p63 activation and accelerated oocyte loss in the absence of DNA damage.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyMissense mutationPremature ovarian insufficiencyPremature ovarian failureGeneticsGeneGene isoformCell biologyMutationEndocrinologyInternal medicineMedicineReproductive Biology and FertilityMolecular Biology Techniques and ApplicationsGenetic and Clinical Aspects of Sex Determination and Chromosomal Abnormalities