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De novo variants in CAMTA1 cause a syndrome variably associated with spasticity, ataxia, and intellectual disability

Authors :
Bart P.C. van de Warrenburg
Mayke Oosterloo
Yvonne J. Vos
Erik-Jan Kamsteeg
Fleur Vansenne
Maartje Pennings
Els K. Vanhoutte
Deborah A Sival
Erica H. Gerkes
Niklas Darin
Hermine E. Veenstra-Knol
Tom J. de Koning
Marina A. J. Tijssen
Iris G.M. Wijnen
Movement Disorder (MD)
MUMC+: DA KG Polikliniek (9)
RS: MHeNs - R1 - Cognitive Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience
Klinische Neurowetenschappen
MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec Neurologie (9)
Source :
Eur J Hum Genet, European Journal of Human Genetics, 28, 763-769, EJHG, 28(6), 763-769. Nature Publishing Group, European Journal of Human Genetics, 28, 6, pp. 763-769, European Journal of Human Genetics, 28(6), 763-769. Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Contains fulltext : 220425.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) Previously, intragenic CAMTA1 copy number variants (CNVs) have been shown to cause non-progressive, congenital ataxia with or without intellectual disability (OMIM#614756). However, ataxia, intellectual disability, and dysmorphic features were all incompletely penetrant, even within families. Here, we describe four patients with de novo nonsense, frameshift or missense CAMTA1 variants. All four patients predominantly manifested features of ataxia and/or spasticity. Borderline intellectual disability and dysmorphic features were both present in one patient only, and other neurological and behavioural symptoms were variably present. Neurodevelopmental delay was found to be mild. Our findings indicate that also nonsense, frameshift and missense variants in CAMTA1 can cause a spastic ataxia syndrome as the main phenotype.

Details

ISSN :
14765438 and 10184813
Volume :
28
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European journal of human genetics : EJHG
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....71c0f9640d5417e531fa02470913d0e3