1. Tremor Ataxia With Central Hypomyelation Phenotype Related to a Recurrent POLR3A Mutation in Six Unrelated Tunisian Families.
- Author
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Kraoua I, Jamoussi M, Drissi C, Kraoua L, Drunat S, Benrhouma H, Ben Younes T, Nagi S, Abdelhak S, Boespflug Tanguy O, Youssef-Turki IB, Trabelsi M, and Dorboz I
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Child, Preschool, Child, Tunisia, Infant, Tremor genetics, Tremor pathology, Mutation, Hereditary Central Nervous System Demyelinating Diseases genetics, Hereditary Central Nervous System Demyelinating Diseases pathology, Ataxia genetics, Ataxia pathology, Cerebellar Ataxia genetics, Cerebellar Ataxia pathology, RNA Polymerase III genetics, Phenotype, Pedigree
- Abstract
Background: POLIII-related leukodystrophies are a group of recently recognized hereditary white matter diseases with a similar clinical and radiological phenotype. No Tunisian studies have been published about POLIII-related leukodystrophy due to POLR3A variants. The aim of this study was to contribute to the clinical, radiological, and genetic characterization of POLR3A-related leukodystrophy in a Tunisian cohort., Methods: We report six cases of genetically confirmed POLR3A-related leukodystrophy belonging to six unrelated Tunisian families, along with a review of previously published pediatric cases., Results: All patients were born to consanguineous marriages and originated from the North or the Center of Tunisia. Age at onset varied between 15 months and 6 years. The clinical phenotype was similar in all patients with cerebellar ataxia, tremor, and nystagmus being the key features. Brain imaging showed diffuse hypomyelination in all patients with progressive cerebellar atrophy in three patients. Molecular analysis identified the same bi-allelic NM_007055.4:c.2011T>C; p.(Trp671Arg) variant in the POLR3A gene in all patients., Conclusion: We hypothesize a founder effect for the identified variant given its recurrence in six unrelated individuals with a similar clinical phenotype. Given the apparent genetic homogeneity of Tunisian POLR3A patients, the recurrent variant should be directly targeted. This should facilitate diagnosis in index patients, and genetic counseling., (© 2024 The Author(s). Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2024
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