1. Unexpected complexity in the molecular diagnosis of spastic paraplegia 11.
- Author
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Mademont-Soler I, Esteba-Castillo S, Jiménez-Xifra A, Alemany B, Ribas-Vidal N, Cutillas M, Coll M, Pinsach ML, Pagans S, Alcalde M, Viñas-Jornet M, Montero-Vale M, de Castro-Miró M, Rodríguez J, Armengol L, Queralt X, and Obón M
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Adult, Exons, Proteins genetics, Codon, Nonsense, Corpus Callosum pathology, Corpus Callosum diagnostic imaging, Sequence Deletion, Phenotype, Spastic Paraplegia, Hereditary genetics, Spastic Paraplegia, Hereditary diagnosis, Spastic Paraplegia, Hereditary pathology
- Abstract
Background: Spastic paraplegia 11 (SPG11) is the most prevalent form of autosomal recessive hereditary spastic paraplegia, resulting from biallelic pathogenic variants in the SPG11 gene (MIM *610844)., Methods: The proband is a 36-year-old female referred for genetic evaluation due to cognitive dysfunction, gait impairment, and corpus callosum atrophy (brain MRI was normal at 25-years-old). Diagnostic approaches included CGH array, next-generation sequencing, and whole transcriptome sequencing., Results: CGH array revealed a 180 kb deletion located upstream of SPG11. Sequencing of SPG11 uncovered two rare single nucleotide variants: the novel variant c.3143C>T in exon 17 (in cis with the deletion), and the previously reported pathogenic variant c.6409C>T in exon 34 (in trans). Whole transcriptome sequencing revealed that the variant c.3143C>T caused exon 17 skipping., Conclusion: We report a novel sequence variant in the SPG11 gene resulting in exon 17 skipping, which, along with a nonsense variant, causes Spastic Paraplegia 11 in our proband. In addition, a deletion upstream of SPG11 was identified in the patient, whose implication in the phenotype remains uncertain. Nonetheless, the deletion apparently affects cis-regulatory elements of the gene, suggesting a potential new pathogenic mechanism underlying the disease in a subset of undiagnosed patients. Our findings further support the hypothesis that the origin of thin corpus callosum in patients with SPG11 is of progressive nature., (© 2024 The Author(s). Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2024
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