ASXL transcriptional regulator 1
The ASXL1 gene provides instructions for making a protein that is involved in a process known as chromatin remodeling. Chromatin is the complex of DNA and proteins that packages DNA into chromosomes. The structure of chromatin can be changed (remodeled) to alter how tightly DNA is packaged. When DNA is tightly packed, gene activity (expression) is lower than when DNA is loosely packed.
Through its role in chromatin remodeling, the ASXL1 protein regulates the expression of many genes, including a group of genes known as HOX genes, which play important roles in development before birth. The ASXL1 protein can turn on (activate) or turn off (repress) HOX genes depending on when they are needed.
The ASXL1 protein may have an additional role in gene regulation by signaling to molecules to add a methyl group (a process called methylation) to an area near a gene called the promoter region, which controls gene activity. When a promoter region is methylated, gene activity is repressed, and when a promoter region is not methylated, the gene is active.
More than 20 mutations in the ASXL1 gene have been found to cause Bohring-Opitz syndrome, a condition that causes abnormal head size and shape, distinctive facial features, joint abnormalities, intellectual disability, and other signs and symptoms. Most of the ASXL1 gene mutations that cause Bohring-Opitz syndrome create a premature stop signal in the instructions for making the ASXL1 protein, resulting in either an abnormally short, nonfunctional protein or a complete lack of ASXL1 protein. These ASXL1 gene mutations are described as "loss-of-function" because they reduce the amount of functional ASXL1 protein available, which likely disrupts the regulation of the activity of HOX genes and other genes during development. Altered activity of HOX genes probably leads to the neurological and physical features of this condition.
Systemic mastocytosis
Mutations in the ASXL1 gene have been associated with cancerous conditions of blood-forming cells, such as acute myeloid leukemia, chronic myelomonocytic leukemia, and myelodysplastic syndrome. These mutations are somatic, which means they are acquired during a person's lifetime and are present only in cells that give rise to cancer.
The mutations associated with these conditions are likely "gain-of-function," which means that they lead to an overactive ASXL1 protein. Researchers believe that the overactive ASXL1 protein leads to poor regulation of gene activity. It is unclear how this altered gene regulation plays a role in the development of cancer, but it is likely that overactive genes promote the growth of cancers by allowing abnormal blood cells to grow and divide uncontrollably.
The ASXL1 gene mutations involved in these cancers are different from the ones that cause Bohring-Opitz syndrome (described above). People with Bohring-Opitz syndrome are not thought to have an increased risk of developing cancer.
This entry is adapted from the peer-reviewed paper https://medlineplus.gov/genetics/gene/asxl1