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Ataxia in Patients With Bi-Allelic NFASC Mutations and Absence of Full-Length NF186

Authors :
Malin Kvarnung
Mansoureh Shahsavani
Fulya Taylan
Mohsen Moslem
Nicole Breeuwsma
Loora Laan
Jens Schuster
Zhe Jin
Daniel Nilsson
Agne Lieden
Britt-Marie Anderlid
Magnus Nordenskjöld
Elisabeth Syk Lundberg
Bryndis Birnir
Niklas Dahl
Ann Nordgren
Anna Lindstrand
Anna Falk
Source :
Frontiers in Genetics, Frontiers in Genetics, Vol 10 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Uppsala universitet, Medicinsk genetik och genomik, 2019.

Abstract

The etiology of hereditary ataxia syndromes is heterogeneous, and the mechanisms underlying these disorders are often unknown. Here, we utilized exome sequencing in two siblings with progressive ataxia and muscular weakness and identified a novel homozygous splice mutation (c.3020-1G > A) in neurofascin (NFASC). In RNA extracted from fibroblasts, we showed that the mutation resulted in inframe skipping of exon 26, with a deprived expression of the full-length transcript that corresponds to NFASC isoform NF186. To further investigate the disease mechanisms, we reprogrammed fibroblasts from one affected sibling to induced pluripotent stem cells, directed them to neuroepithelial stem cells and finally differentiated to neurons. In early neurogenesis, differentiating cells with selective depletion of the NF186 isoform showed significantly reduced neurite outgrowth as well as fewer emerging neurites. Furthermore, whole-cell patch-clamp recordings of patient-derived neuronal cells revealed a lower threshold for openings, indicating altered Na+ channel kinetics, suggesting a lower threshold for openings as compared to neuronal cells without the NFASC mutation. Taken together, our results suggest that loss of the full-length NFASC isoform NF186 causes perturbed neurogenesis and impaired neuronal biophysical properties resulting in a novel early-onset autosomal recessive ataxia syndrome.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Genetics, Frontiers in Genetics, Vol 10 (2019)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8fde83f1f5b0f71d2d1fe8128ee3bf07