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POLR3A variants in hereditary spastic paraparesis and ataxia: clinical, genetic, and neuroradiological findings in a cohort of Italian patients

Authors :
Ivana Ricca
Giovanna De Michele
Nicola Fini
Mario Cirillo
Antonio Federico
Maria Teresa Dotti
Alessandra Tessa
Mariarosa A. B. Melone
Fiorella Gurrieri
Alessandro Filla
Gabriella Silvestri
Ilaria Di Donato
Vittorio Riso
Filippo M. Santorelli
Federica Matrone
Alfonso Cerase
Gemma Natale
Antonio Gallo
Di Donato, Ilaria
Gallo, Antonio
Ricca, Ivana
Fini, Nicola
Silvestri, Gabriella
Gurrieri, Fiorella
Cirillo, Mario
Cerase, Alfonso
Natale, Gemma
Matrone, Federica
Riso, Vittorio
Melone, Mariarosa Anna Beatrice
Tessa, Alessandra
De Michele, Giovanna
Federico, Antonio
Filla, Alessandro
Teresa Dotti, Maria
Maria Santorelli, Filippo
Source :
Neurological Sciences
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Mutations in POLR3A are characterized by high phenotypic heterogeneity, with manifestations ranging from severe childhood-onset hypomyelinating leukodystrophic syndromes to milder and later-onset gait disorders with central hypomyelination, with or without additional non-neurological signs. Recently, a milder phenotype consisting of late-onset spastic ataxia without hypomyelinating leukodystrophy has been suggested to be specific to the intronic c.1909 + 22G > A mutation in POLR3A. Here, we present 10 patients from 8 unrelated families with POLR3A-related late-onset spastic ataxia, all harboring the c.1909 + 22G > A variant. Most of them showed an ataxic-spastic picture, two a “pure” cerebellar phenotype, and one a “pure” spastic presentation. The non-neurological findings typically associated with POLR3A mutations were absent in all the patients. The main findings on brain MRI were bilateral hyperintensity along the superior cerebellar peduncles on FLAIR sequences, observed in most of the patients, and cerebellar and/or spinal cord atrophy, found in half of the patients. Only one patient exhibited central hypomyelination. The POLR3A mutations present in this cohort were the c.1909 + 22G > A splice site variant found in compound heterozygosity with six additional variants (three missense, two nonsense, one splice) and, in one patient, with a novel large deletion involving exons 14–18. Interestingly, this patient had the most “complex” presentation among those observed in our cohort; it included some neurological and non-neurological features, such as seizures, neurosensory deafness, and lipomas, that have not previously been reported in association with late-onset POLR3A-related disorders, and therefore further expand the phenotype.

Details

ISSN :
15903478
Volume :
43
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurological sciences : official journal of the Italian Neurological Society and of the Italian Society of Clinical NeurophysiologyReferences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....65012b5cc049bedb1151dfb5f663641a