Back to Search Start Over

Biallelic variants in HPDL cause pure and complicated hereditary spastic paraplegia.

Authors :
Wiessner M
Maroofian R
Ni MY
Pedroni A
Müller JS
Stucka R
Beetz C
Efthymiou S
Santorelli FM
Alfares AA
Zhu C
Uhrova Meszarosova A
Alehabib E
Bakhtiari S
Janecke AR
Otero MG
Chen JYH
Peterson JT
Strom TM
De Jonghe P
Deconinck T
De Ridder W
De Winter J
Pasquariello R
Ricca I
Alfadhel M
van de Warrenburg BP
Portier R
Bergmann C
Ghasemi Firouzabadi S
Jin SC
Bilguvar K
Hamed S
Abdelhameed M
Haridy NA
Maqbool S
Rahman F
Anwar N
Carmichael J
Pagnamenta A
Wood NW
Tran Mau-Them F
Haack T
Di Rocco M
Ceccherini I
Iacomino M
Zara F
Salpietro V
Scala M
Rusmini M
Xu Y
Wang Y
Suzuki Y
Koh K
Nan H
Ishiura H
Tsuji S
Lambert L
Schmitt E
Lacaze E
Küpper H
Dredge D
Skraban C
Goldstein A
Willis MJH
Grand K
Graham JM
Lewis RA
Millan F
Duman Ö
Dündar N
Uyanik G
Schöls L
Nürnberg P
Nürnberg G
Catala Bordes A
Seeman P
Kuchar M
Darvish H
Rebelo A
Bouçanova F
Medard JJ
Chrast R
Auer-Grumbach M
Alkuraya FS
Shamseldin H
Al Tala S
Rezazadeh Varaghchi J
Najafi M
Deschner S
Gläser D
Hüttel W
Kruer MC
Kamsteeg EJ
Takiyama Y
Züchner S
Baets J
Synofzik M
Schüle R
Horvath R
Houlden H
Bartesaghi L
Lee HJ
Ampatzis K
Pierson TM
Senderek J
Source :
Brain : a journal of neurology [Brain] 2021 Jun 22; Vol. 144 (5), pp. 1422-1434.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Human 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase-like (HPDL) is a putative iron-containing non-heme oxygenase of unknown specificity and biological significance. We report 25 families containing 34 individuals with neurological disease associated with biallelic HPDL variants. Phenotypes ranged from juvenile-onset pure hereditary spastic paraplegia to infantile-onset spasticity and global developmental delays, sometimes complicated by episodes of neurological and respiratory decompensation. Variants included bona fide pathogenic truncating changes, although most were missense substitutions. Functionality of variants could not be determined directly as the enzymatic specificity of HPDL is unknown; however, when HPDL missense substitutions were introduced into 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD, an HPDL orthologue), they impaired the ability of HPPD to convert 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate into homogentisate. Moreover, three additional sets of experiments provided evidence for a role of HPDL in the nervous system and further supported its link to neurological disease: (i) HPDL was expressed in the nervous system and expression increased during neural differentiation; (ii) knockdown of zebrafish hpdl led to abnormal motor behaviour, replicating aspects of the human disease; and (iii) HPDL localized to mitochondria, consistent with mitochondrial disease that is often associated with neurological manifestations. Our findings suggest that biallelic HPDL variants cause a syndrome varying from juvenile-onset pure hereditary spastic paraplegia to infantile-onset spastic tetraplegia associated with global developmental delays.<br /> (© The Author(s) (2021). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1460-2156
Volume :
144
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Brain : a journal of neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33970200
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awab041