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Genotype/phenotype correlations in AARS-related neuropathy in a cohort of patients from the United Kingdom and Ireland.

Authors :
Bansagi, Boglarka
Antoniadi, Thalia
Burton-Jones, Sarah
Murphy, Sinead
McHugh, John
Alexander, Michael
Wells, Richard
Davies, Joanna
Hilton-Jones, David
Lochmüller, Hanns
Chinnery, Patrick
Horvath, Rita
Source :
Journal of Neurology; Aug2015, Vol. 262 Issue 8, p1899-1908, 10p, 1 Diagram, 2 Charts, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) is the most common inherited neuropathy with heterogeneous clinical presentation and genetic background. The axonal form (CMT2) is characterised by decreased action potentials indicating primary axonal damage. The underlying pathology involves axonal degeneration which is supposed to be related to axonal protein dysfunction caused by various gene mutations. The overlapping clinical manifestation of CMT2 with distal hereditary motor neuropathy (dHMN) and intermediate CMT causes further diagnostic difficulties. Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases have been implicated in the pathomechanism of CMT2. They have an essential role in protein translation by attaching amino acids to their cognate tRNAs. To date six families have been reported worldwide with dominant missense alanyl-tRNA synthetase ( AARS) mutations leading to clinically heterogeneous axonal neuropathies. The pathomechanism of some variants could be explained by impaired amino acylation activity while other variants implicating an editing defect need to be further investigated. Here, we report a cohort of six additional families originating from the United Kingdom and Ireland with dominant AARS-related neuropathies. The phenotypic manifestation was distal lower limb predominant sensorimotor neuropathy but upper limb impairment with split hand deformity occasionally associated. Nerve conduction studies revealed significant demyelination accompanying the axonal lesion in motor and sensory nerves. Five families have the c.986G>A, p.(Arg329His) variant, further supporting that this is a recurrent loss of function variant. The sixth family, of Irish origin, had a novel missense variant, c.2063A>G, p.(Glu688Gly). We discuss our findings and the associated phenotypic heterogeneity in these families, which expands the clinical spectrum of AARS-related neuropathies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03405354
Volume :
262
Issue :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
108951198
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00415-015-7778-4