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SYT1-associated neurodevelopmental disorder: a case series

Authors :
Baker, K
Gordon, SL
Melland, H
Bumbak, F
Scott, DJ
Jiang, TJ
Owen, D
Turner, BJ
Boyd, SG
Rossi, M
Al-Raqad, M
Elpeleg, O
Peck, D
Mancini, GMS
Wilke, M
Zollino, M
Marangi, G
Weigand, H
Borggraefe, I
Haack, T
Stark, Z
Sadedin, S
Tan, TY
Jiang, Y
Gibbs, RA
Ellingwood, S
Amaral, M
Kelley, W
Kurian, MA
Cousin, MA
Raymond, FL
Baker, K
Gordon, SL
Melland, H
Bumbak, F
Scott, DJ
Jiang, TJ
Owen, D
Turner, BJ
Boyd, SG
Rossi, M
Al-Raqad, M
Elpeleg, O
Peck, D
Mancini, GMS
Wilke, M
Zollino, M
Marangi, G
Weigand, H
Borggraefe, I
Haack, T
Stark, Z
Sadedin, S
Tan, TY
Jiang, Y
Gibbs, RA
Ellingwood, S
Amaral, M
Kelley, W
Kurian, MA
Cousin, MA
Raymond, FL
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Synaptotagmin 1 (SYT1) is a critical mediator of fast, synchronous, calcium-dependent neurotransmitter release and also modulates synaptic vesicle endocytosis. This paper describes 11 patients with de novo heterozygous missense mutations in SYT1. All mutations alter highly conserved residues, and cluster in two regions of the SYT1 C2B domain at positions Met303 (M303K), Asp304 (D304G), Asp366 (D366E), Ile368 (I368T) and Asn371 (N371K). Phenotypic features include infantile hypotonia, congenital ophthalmic abnormalities, childhood-onset hyperkinetic movement disorders, motor stereotypies, and developmental delay varying in severity from moderate to profound. Behavioural characteristics include sleep disturbance and episodic agitation. Absence of epileptic seizures and normal orbitofrontal head circumference are important negative features. Structural MRI is unremarkable but EEG disturbance is universal, characterized by intermittent low frequency high amplitude oscillations. The functional impact of these five de novo SYT1 mutations has been assessed by expressing rat SYT1 protein containing the equivalent human variants in wild-type mouse primary hippocampal cultures. All mutant forms of SYT1 were expressed at levels approximately equal to endogenous wild-type protein, and correctly localized to nerve terminals at rest, except for SYT1M303K, which was expressed at a lower level and failed to localize at nerve terminals. Following stimulation, SYT1I368T and SYT1N371K relocalized to nerve terminals at least as efficiently as wild-type SYT1. However, SYT1D304G and SYT1D366E failed to relocalize to nerve terminals following stimulation, indicative of impairments in endocytic retrieval and trafficking of SYT1. In addition, the presence of SYT1 variants at nerve terminals induced a slowing of exocytic rate following sustained action potential stimulation. The extent of disturbance to synaptic vesicle kinetics is mirrored by the severity of the affected individuals' phenot

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315726127
Document Type :
Electronic Resource