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Delineating SPTAN1 associated phenotypes : From isolated epilepsy to encephalopathy with progressive brain atrophy

Authors :
Susanne Ruf
Domenica Battaglia
Renzo Guerrini
Steffen Syrbe
Constanze Lämmer
Ulrike Mütze
Tiziana Pisano
Jun Tohyama
Katherine L. Helbig
Nienke E. Verbeek
Julia Wickert
Lydie Burglen
Bobby P. C. Koeleman
Takeshi Matsushige
Ulrich Bernbeck
Ellen van Binsbergen
Frauke Hornemann
Jonas Denecke
Kerstin Kutsche
Tilman Polster
Elena Parrini
Naomichi Matsumoto
Hirotomo Saitsu
G. Christoph Korenke
Beate Albrecht
Bénédicte Héron
Alma Kuechler
Ryuki Matsuura
Rikke S. Møller
Saskia Biskup
Andreas Merkenschlager
William B. Dobyns
Hannah Stamberger
Johannes R. Lemke
Mitsuhiro Kato
Mitsuko Nakashima
Martino Montomoli
Francesco Mari
Cyril Mignot
Frederike L. Harms
Henrike O. Heyne
Sarah Weckhuysen
Georg F. Hoffmann
Wendy Werckx
Source :
Syrbe, S, Harms, F L, Parrini, E, Montomoli, M, Mütze, U, Helbig, K L, Polster, T, Albrecht, B, Bernbeck, U, van Binsbergen, E, Biskup, S, Burglen, L, Denecke, J, Heron, B, Heyne, H O, Hoffmann, G F, Hornemann, F, Matsushige, T, Matsuura, R, Kato, M, Korenke, G C, Kuechler, A, Lämmer, C, Merkenschlager, A, Mignot, C, Ruf, S, Nakashima, M, Saitsu, H, Stamberger, H, Pisano, T, Tohyama, J, Weckhuysen, S, Werckx, W, Wickert, J, Mari, F, Verbeek, N E, Møller, R S, Koeleman, B, Matsumoto, N, Dobyns, W B, Battaglia, D, Lemke, J R, Kutsche, K & Guerrini, R 2017, ' Delineating SPTAN1 associated phenotypes : from isolated epilepsy to encephalopathy with progressive brain atrophy ', Brain, vol. 140, no. 9, pp. 2322-2336 . https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awx195, Brain, Brain, 140(9), 2322. Oxford University Press
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

De novo in-frame deletions and duplications in the SPTAN1 gene, encoding the non-erythrocyte aII spectrin, have been associated with severe West syndrome with hypomyelination and pontocerebellar atrophy. We aimed at comprehensively delineating the phenotypic spectrum associated with SPTAN1 mutations. Using different molecular genetic techniques, we identified 20 patients with a pathogenic or likely pathogenic SPTAN1 variant and reviewed their clinical, genetic and imaging data. SPTAN1 de novo alterations included seven unique missense variants and nine in-frame deletions/duplications of which 12 were novel. The recurrent three-amino acid duplication p.(Asp2303_Leu2305dup) occurred in five patients. Our patient cohort exhibited a broad spectrum of neurodevelopmental phenotypes, comprising six patients with mild to moderate intellectual disability, with or without epilepsy and behavioural disorders, and 14 patients with infantile epileptic encephalopathy, of which 13 had severe neurodevelopmental impairment and four died in early childhood. Imaging studies suggested that the severity of neurological impairment and epilepsy correlates with that of structural abnormalities as well as the mutation type and location. Out of seven patients harbouring mutations outside the alpha/beta spectrin heterodimerization domain, four had normal brain imaging and three exhibited moderately progressive brain and/or cerebellar atrophy. Twelve of 13 patients with mutations located within the spectrin heterodimer contact site exhibited severe and progressive brain, brainstem and cerebellar atrophy, with hypomyelination in most. We used fibroblasts from five patients to study spectrin aggregate formation by Triton-X extraction and immunocytochemistry followed by fluorescence microscopy. alpha II/beta II aggregates and aII spectrin in the insoluble protein fraction were observed in fibroblasts derived from patients with the mutations p.(Glu2207del), p.(Asp2303_Leu2305dup) and p.(Arg2308_Met2309dup), all falling in the nucleation site of the alpha/beta spectrin heterodimer region. Molecular modelling of the seven SPTAN1 amino acid changes provided preliminary evidence for structural alterations of the A-, B-and/or C-helices within each of the mutated spectrin repeats. We conclude that SPTAN1-related disorders comprise a wide spectrum of neurodevelopmental phenotypes ranging from mild to severe and progressive. Spectrin aggregate formation in fibroblasts with mutations in the alpha/beta heterodimerization domain seems to be associated with a severe neurodegenerative course and suggests that the amino acid stretch from Asp2303 to Met2309 in the alpha 20 repeat is important for alpha/beta spectrin heterodimer formation and/or alpha II spectrin function.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00068950
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Syrbe, S, Harms, F L, Parrini, E, Montomoli, M, Mütze, U, Helbig, K L, Polster, T, Albrecht, B, Bernbeck, U, van Binsbergen, E, Biskup, S, Burglen, L, Denecke, J, Heron, B, Heyne, H O, Hoffmann, G F, Hornemann, F, Matsushige, T, Matsuura, R, Kato, M, Korenke, G C, Kuechler, A, Lämmer, C, Merkenschlager, A, Mignot, C, Ruf, S, Nakashima, M, Saitsu, H, Stamberger, H, Pisano, T, Tohyama, J, Weckhuysen, S, Werckx, W, Wickert, J, Mari, F, Verbeek, N E, Møller, R S, Koeleman, B, Matsumoto, N, Dobyns, W B, Battaglia, D, Lemke, J R, Kutsche, K & Guerrini, R 2017, ' Delineating SPTAN1 associated phenotypes : from isolated epilepsy to encephalopathy with progressive brain atrophy ', Brain, vol. 140, no. 9, pp. 2322-2336 . https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awx195, Brain, Brain, 140(9), 2322. Oxford University Press
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e7769a55d651ee19f577237e22e832df