Mutations in MTHFR and POLG impaired activity of the mitochondrial respiratory chain in 46-year-old twins with spastic paraparesis.
Arnaud WiedemannCéline CheryDavid CoelhoJustine FlayacNaïg GueguenValérie Desquiret-DumasFrançois FeilletChristian LavigneJean-Philippe NeauBrian FowlerMatthias R BaumgartnerPascal ReynierJean-Louis GuéantAbderrahim OussalahPublished in: Journal of human genetics (2019)
Hereditary spastic paraplegias (HSPs) are characterized by lower extremity spasticity and weakness. HSP is often caused by mutations in SPG genes, but it may also be produced by inborn errors of metabolism. We performed next-generation sequencing of 4813 genes in one adult twin pair with HSP and severe muscular weakness occurring at the same age. We found two pathogenic compound heterozygous variants in MTHFR, including a variant not referenced in international databases, c.197C>T (p.Pro66Leu) and a known variant, c.470G>A (p.Arg157Gln), and two heterozygous pathogenic variants in POLG, c.1760C>T (p.Pro587Leu) and c.752C>T (p.Thr251Ile). MTHFR and POLG mutations were consistent with the severe muscle weakness and the metabolic changes, including hyperhomocysteinemia and decreased activity of both N(5,10)methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) and complexes I and II of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. These data suggest the potential role of MTHFR and POLG mutations through consequences on mitochondrial dysfunction in the occurrence of spastic paraparesis phenotype with combined metabolic, muscular, and neurological components.
Keyphrases
- cerebral palsy
- early onset
- botulinum toxin
- copy number
- upper limb
- heat shock
- oxidative stress
- heat shock protein
- genome wide
- heat stress
- spinal cord injury
- risk assessment
- skeletal muscle
- big data
- patient safety
- gene expression
- young adults
- deep learning
- bioinformatics analysis
- machine learning
- respiratory tract
- drug induced
- genome wide identification
- climate change
- brain injury
- circulating tumor cells
- quality improvement
- childhood cancer