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Pathogenic CWF19L1 variants as a novel cause of autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxia and atrophy

Authors :
Rick Kamps
Irenaeus F.M. de Coo
Iris B W Boesten
Bart de Koning
Hubert J.M. Smeets
Minh Nhut Nguyen
Mike Gerards
Debby M.E.I. Hellebrekers
Jo Vanoevelen
Neurology
RS: GROW - R4 - Reproductive and Perinatal Medicine
Promovendi CD
Genetica & Celbiologie
MUMC+: DA KG Lab Centraal Lab (9)
Ondersteunend personeel CD
Sciences
RS: FSE MaCSBio
RS: FPN MaCSBio
RS: FHML MaCSBio
Klinische Genetica
RS: CARIM - R2.10 - Mitochondrial disease
Source :
European Journal of Human Genetics, 24(4), 619-622. Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2016.

Abstract

Autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxia (ARCA) is a group of neurological disorders characterized by degeneration or abnormal development of the cerebellum and spinal cord. ARCA is clinically and genetically highly heterogeneous, with over 20 genes involved. Exome sequencing of a girl with ARCA from non-consanguineous Dutch parents revealed two pathogenic variants c.37G>C; p.D13H and c.946A>T; p.K316* in CWF19L1, a gene with an unknown function, recently reported to cause ARCA in a Turkish family. Sanger sequencing showed that the c.37G>C variant was inherited from the father and the c.946A>T variant from the mother. Pathogenicity was based on the damaging effect on protein function as the c.37G>C variant changed the highly conserved, negatively charged aspartic acid to the positively charged histidine and the c.946A>T variant introduced a premature stop codon. In addition, 27 patients with ARCA were tested for pathogenic variants in CWF19L1, however, no pathogenic variants were identified. Our data confirm CWF19L1 as a novel but rare gene causing ARCA.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14765438 and 10184813
Volume :
24
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Human Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....862b1f8d456f6c6e08ee912c27b4de74