Deep geno- and phenotyping in two consanguineous families with CMT2 reveals HADHA as an unusual disease-causing gene and an intronic variant in GDAP1 as an unusual mutation.
Marzieh KhaniHanieh TaheriHosein ShamshiriHamidreza MoazzeniJohn HardyJose Tomas BrasKolsoum InanlooRahatlooAfagh AlaviShahriar NafissiElahe ElahiPublished in: Journal of neurology (2020)
The finding of a HADHA mutation as a cause of CMT is of interest because its encoded protein is a subunit of the mitochondrial trifunctional protein (MTP) complex, a mitochondrial enzyme involved in long chain fatty acid oxidation. Long chain fatty acid oxidation is an important source of energy for skeletal muscles. The mutation found in CMT2-102 is only the second intronic mutation reported in GDAP1. The mutation in the CMT2-102 pedigree was outside the canonical splice site sequences, emphasizing the importance of careful examination of available intronic sequences in exome sequence data.