4.5 Article

SERAC1 deficiency causes complicated HSP: evidence from a novel splice mutation in a large family

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS
Volume 55, Issue 1, Pages 39-47

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jmedgenet-2017-104622

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Union within the 7th European Community Framework Programme through funding for the E-RARE-3 Joint Transnational Call grant 'Preparing therapies for autosomal recessive ataxias' (PREPARE) (BMBF) [01GM1607]
  2. e-Rare Network NEUROLIPID (BMBF) [01GM1408B]
  3. Marie Curie International Outgoing Fellowship [PIOF-GA-2012-326681]
  4. Else Kroner-Fresenius-Stiftung
  5. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke of the National Institutes of Health [R01NS072248]
  6. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01ZX1405C]

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Objective To demonstrate that mutations in the phosphatidylglycerol remodelling enzyme SERAC 1 can cause juvenile-onset complicated hereditary spastic paraplegia (cHSP) clusters, thus adding SERAC1 to the increasing number of complex lipid cHSP genes. Methods C ombined genomic and functional validation studies (whole-exome sequencing, mRNA, cDNA and protein), biomarker investigations (3-methyl-glutaconic acid, filipin staining and phosphatidylglycerols PG34: 1/PG36: 1), and clinical and imaging phenotyping were performed in six affected subjects from two different branches of a large consanguineous family. Results 5 of 6 affected subjects shared cHSP as a common disease phenotype. Three subjects presented with juvenile-onset oligosystemic cHSP, still able to walk several miles at age > 10-20 years. This benign phenotypic cluster and disease progression is strikingly divergent to the severe infantile phenotype of all SERAC1 cases reported so far. Two family members showed a more multisystemic juvenile-onset cHSP, indicating an intermediate phenotype between the benign oligosystemic cHSP and the classic infantile SERAC1 cluster. The homozygous splice mutation led to loss of the full-length SERAC 1 protein and impaired phosphatidylglycerol PG34: 1/PG36: 1 remodelling. These phosphatidylglycerol changes, however, were milder than in classic infantile-onset SERAC1 cases, which might partially explain the milder SERAC 1 phenotype. Conclusions Our findings add SERAC1 to the increasing list of complex lipid cHSP genes. At the same time they redefine the phenotypic spectrum of SERAC 1 deficiency. It is associated not only with the severe infantile-onset ' Methylglutaconic aciduria, Deafness, Encephalopathy, Leigh-like' syndrome (MEGDEL syndrome), but also with oligosystemic juvenile-onset cHSP as part of the now unfolding SERAC1 deficiency spectrum.

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