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Mutations in CYP2U1, DDHD2 and GBA2 genes are rare causes of complicated forms of hereditary spastic paraparesis
Ist Teil von
Journal of neurology, 2014-02, Vol.261 (2), p.373-381
Ort / Verlag
Berlin/Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erscheinungsjahr
2014
Quelle
MEDLINE
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Complicated hereditary spastic paraplegias (HSP) are a heterogeneous group of HSP characterized by spasticity associated with a variable combination of neurologic and extra-neurologic signs and symptoms. Among them, HSP with thin corpus callosum and intellectual disability is a frequent subtype, often inherited as a recessive trait (ARHSP-TCC). Within this heterogeneous subgroup, SPG11 and SPG15 represent the most frequent subtypes. We analyzed the mutation frequency of three genes associated with early-onset forms of ARHSP with and without TCC,
CYP2U1/
SPG56,
DDHD2
/SPG54 and
GBA2/
SPG46, in a large population of selected complicated HSP patients by using a combined approach of traditional-based and amplicon-based high-throughput pooled-sequencing. Three families with mutations were identified, one for each of the genes analyzed. Novel homozygous mutations were identified in
CYP2U1
(c.1A>C/p.Met1?) and in
GBA2 (
c.2048G>C/p.Gly683Arg), while the homozygous mutation found in
DDHD2
(c.1978G>C/p.Asp660His) had been previously reported in a compound heterozygous state. The phenotypes associated with the
CYP2U1
and
DDHD2
mutations overlap the SPG56 and the SPG54 subtypes, respectively, with few differences. By contrast, the
GBA2
mutated patients show phenotypes combining typical features of both the SPG46 subtype and the recessive ataxia form, with marked intrafamilial variability thereby expanding the spectrum of clinical entities associated with
GBA2
mutations. Overall, each of three genes analyzed shows a low mutation frequency in a general population of complicated HSP (<1 % for either
CYP2U1
or
DDHD2
and approximately 2 % for
GBA2
). These findings underline once again the genetic heterogeneity of ARHSP-TCC and the clinical overlap between complicated HSP and the recessive ataxia syndromes.