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Monogenic variants in dystonia: an exome-wide sequencing study

Authors :
Gonzalo Alonso Ramos-Rivera
Julia Vera
Holger Prokisch
Sebastian Schröder
Michal Minár
Hartmut Engels
Thomas Herberhold
Jessica Becker
Robert Jech
Anna Szuto
Angela Jochim
Theresa Brunet
Tobias Meindl
V. Kraus
Ivan Milenkovic
Alexandra Sitzberger
Jana Švantnerová
Birgit Assmann
Evžen Růžička
Felix Distelmaier
Chen Zhao
Martin Krenn
Stephan Grunwald
Renzo Guerrini
Christine Makowski
Alice Kuster
Yasemin Dincer
Pedro Gonzalez-Alegre
Petra Havránková
Bader Alhaddad
Zuzana Gdovinova
Tobias Bock-Bierbaum
Annette Hackenberg
Friederike Wilbert
Esther M. Maier
Katrin Õunap
Francisca Millan Zamora
David Weise
Birgit Leineweber
Vladimír Haň
Matias Wagner
Roberto Colombo
Marc E. Wolf
Tim M. Strom
Laura Pölsler
Veronika Pilshofer
Tanya Bardakjian
Steffi Patzer
Oliver Daumke
Ingo Borggraefe
Korbinian M. Riedhammer
Richard E. Person
Ulrich A. Schatz
Michaela Bonfert
Jan Roth
Monica H. Wojcik
Riccardo Berutti
Wendy K. Chung
Robert Steinfeld
Kirsten Cremer
Sylvia Boesch
Steffen Berweck
Ján Necpál
Berthold Langguth
Matej Skorvanek
Mónica Troncoso
Fang Fang
Laurie J. Ozelius
Dominik S. Westphal
Bernhard Haslinger
Rafał Płoski
Jens Volkmann
Konrad Oexle
Thomas Musacchio
Martin Hecht
Aida Telegrafi
Matthias Eckenweiler
Edda Haberlandt
Arcangela Iuso
Volker Mall
Michael Zech
Christian Staufner
Thomas Opladen
Sander Pajusalu
Lindsay B. Henderson
Thomas Sycha
Karel Bechyně
Petra Pavelekova
David A. Dyment
Iva Příhodová
Katharina Vill
Annalisa Vetro
Tobias Mantel
Malgorzata Stoklosa
Miriam Adamovičová
Anna Fečíková
Fritz Zimprich
Pavlína Danhofer
Juliane Winkelmann
Franco Laccone
Elisabeth Graf
Sandrina Weber
Timo Roser
Saskia B. Wortmann
Astrid Blaschek
Ronald D. Cohn
Olga Ulmanová
Andres O. Ceballos-Baumann
Matthias Baumann
Branislav Veselý
Barbara Plecko
Source :
Lancet Neurol. 19, 908-918 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Summary Background Dystonia is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous condition that occurs in isolation (isolated dystonia), in combination with other movement disorders (combined dystonia), or in the context of multisymptomatic phenotypes (isolated or combined dystonia with other neurological involvement). However, our understanding of its aetiology is still incomplete. We aimed to elucidate the monogenic causes for the major clinical categories of dystonia. Methods For this exome-wide sequencing study, study participants were identified at 33 movement-disorder and neuropaediatric specialty centres in Austria, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Poland, Slovakia, and Switzerland. Each individual with dystonia was diagnosed in accordance with the dystonia consensus definition. Index cases were eligible for this study if they had no previous genetic diagnosis and no indication of an acquired cause of their illness. The second criterion was not applied to a subset of participants with a working clinical diagnosis of dystonic cerebral palsy. Genomic DNA was extracted from blood of participants and whole-exome sequenced. To find causative variants in known disorder-associated genes, all variants were filtered, and unreported variants were classified according to American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics guidelines. All considered variants were reviewed in expert round-table sessions to validate their clinical significance. Variants that survived filtering and interpretation procedures were defined as diagnostic variants. In the cases that went undiagnosed, candidate dystonia-causing genes were prioritised in a stepwise workflow. Findings We sequenced the exomes of 764 individuals with dystonia and 346 healthy parents who were recruited between June 1, 2015, and July 31, 2019. We identified causative or probable causative variants in 135 (19%) of 728 families, involving 78 distinct monogenic disorders. We observed a larger proportion of individuals with diagnostic variants in those with dystonia (either isolated or combined) with coexisting non-movement disorder-related neurological symptoms (100 [45%] of 222; excepting cases with evidence of perinatal brain injury) than in those with combined (19 [19%] of 98) or isolated (16 [4%] of 388) dystonia. Across all categories of dystonia, 104 (65%) of the 160 detected variants affected genes which are associated with neurodevelopmental disorders. We found diagnostic variants in 11 genes not previously linked to dystonia, and propose a predictive clinical score that could guide the implementation of exome sequencing in routine diagnostics. In cases without perinatal sentinel events, genomic alterations contributed substantively to the diagnosis of dystonic cerebral palsy. In 15 families, we delineated 12 candidate genes. These include IMPDH2, encoding a key purine biosynthetic enzyme, for which robust evidence existed for its involvement in a neurodevelopmental disorder with dystonia. We identified six variants in IMPDH2, collected from four independent cohorts, that were predicted to be deleterious de-novo variants and expected to result in deregulation of purine metabolism. Interpretation In this study, we have determined the role of monogenic variants across the range of dystonic disorders, providing guidance for the introduction of personalised care strategies and fostering follow-up pathophysiological explorations. Funding Else Kroner-Fresenius-Stiftung, Technische Universitat Munchen, Helmholtz Zentrum Munchen, Medizinische Universitat Innsbruck, Charles University in Prague, Czech Ministry of Education, the Slovak Grant and Development Agency, the Slovak Research and Grant Agency.

Details

ISSN :
14744465
Volume :
19
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet. Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dd264ee4880c0208b07e191ccabdb9c0