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Genotype-phenotype analysis in patients with giant axonal neuropathy (GAN)

Authors :
Anja Schirmacher
Helmut Wörle
Vedrana Milic Rasic
Kathrin Hühne
Kristl G. Claeys
Eva Nelis
Olga Koop
Vincent Timmerman
Maria A. Ramos-Arroyo
Philippe Evrard
Gregor Kuhlenbäumer
Jutta Gärtner
Simon Hammans
Bernd Rautenstrauss
Jukka S. Moilanen
Peter De Jonghe
Bernd Ringelstein
Silke Appenzeller
Source :
Neuromuscular disorders
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Giant axonal neuropathy (GAN, MIM: 256850) is a devastating autosomal recessive disorder characterized by an early onset severe peripheral neuropathy, varying central nervous system involvement and strikingly frizzly hair. Giant axonal neuropathy is usually caused by mutations in the gigaxonin gene (GAN) but genetic heterogeneity has been demonstrated for a milder variant of this disease. Here, we report ten patients referred to us for molecular genetic diagnosis. All patients had typical clinical signs suggestive of giant axonal neuropathy. In seven affected individuals, we found disease causing mutations in the gigaxonin gene affecting both alleles: two splice-site and four missense mutations, not reported previously. Gigaxonin binds N-terminally to ubiquitin activating enzyme E1 and C-terminally to various microtubule associated proteins causing their ubiquitin mediated degradation. It was shown for a number of gigaxonin mutations that they impede this process leading to accumulation of microtubule associated proteins and there by impairing cellular functions.

Details

ISSN :
09608966
Volume :
17
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuromuscular disorders : NMD
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7c6ec039fb965fab4910b78af705889c