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PSMC1 variant causes a novel neurological syndrome.

Authors :
Aharoni, Sarit
Proskorovski‐Ohayon, Regina
Krishnan, Ramesh Kumar
Yogev, Yuval
Wormser, Ohad
Hadar, Noam
Bakhrat, Anna
Alshafee, Ismael
Gombosh, Maya
Agam, Nadav
Gradstein, Libe
Shorer, Zamir
Zarivach, Raz
Eskin‐Schwartz, Marina
Abdu, Uri
Birk, Ohad S.
Source :
Clinical Genetics. Oct2022, Vol. 102 Issue 4, p324-332. 9p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Proteasome 26S, the eukaryotic proteasome, serves as the machinery for cellular protein degradation. It is composed of the 20S core particle and one or two 19S regulatory particles, composed of a base and a lid. To date, several human diseases have been associated with mutations within the 26S proteasome subunits; only one of them affects a base subunit. We now delineate an autosomal recessive syndrome of failure to thrive, severe developmental delay and intellectual disability, spastic tetraplegia with central hypotonia, chorea, hearing loss, micropenis and undescended testes, as well as mild elevation of liver enzymes. None of the affected individuals achieved verbal communication or ambulation. Ventriculomegaly was evident on MRI. Homozygosity mapping combined with exome sequencing revealed a disease‐associated p.I328T PSMC1 variant. Protein modeling demonstrated that the PSMC1 variant is located at the highly conserved putative ATP binding and hydrolysis domain, and is suggested to interrupt a hydrophobic core within the protein. Fruit flies in which we silenced the Drosophila ortholog Rpt2 specifically in the eye exhibited an apparent phenotype that was highly rescued by the human wild‐type PSMC1, yet only partly by the mutant PSMC1, proving the functional effect of the p.I328T disease‐causing variant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00099163
Volume :
102
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Clinical Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
158963755
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/cge.14195