TMEM63C mutations cause mitochondrial morphology defects and underlie hereditary spastic paraplegia.
Luis Carlos TábaraFatema Al-SalmiReza MaroofianAmna Mohammed Al-FutaisiFathiya Al-MurshediJoanna KennedyJacob O DayThomas CourtinAisha Al-KhayatHamid GaledariNeda MazaheriMargherita ProtasoniMark JohnsonJoseph S LeslieClaire G SalterLettie E RawlinsJames FashamAlmundher Al-MaawaliNikol VoutsinaPerrine CharlesLaura HarroldBoris KerenEdmund R S KunjiBarbara VonaGholamreza JelodarAlireza SedaghatGholamreza ShariatiHenry HouldenAndrew H CrosbyJulien PrudentEmma L BaplePublished in: Brain : a journal of neurology (2022)
The hereditary spastic paraplegias (HSP) are among the most genetically diverse of all Mendelian disorders. They comprise a large group of neurodegenerative diseases that may be divided into 'pure HSP' in forms of the disease primarily entailing progressive lower-limb weakness and spasticity, and 'complex HSP' when these features are accompanied by other neurological (or non-neurological) clinical signs. Here, we identified biallelic variants in the transmembrane protein 63C (TMEM63C) gene, encoding a predicted osmosensitive calcium-permeable cation channel, in individuals with hereditary spastic paraplegias associated with mild intellectual disability in some, but not all cases. Biochemical and microscopy analyses revealed that TMEM63C is an endoplasmic reticulum-localized protein, which is particularly enriched at mitochondria-endoplasmic reticulum contact sites. Functional in cellula studies indicate a role for TMEM63C in regulating both endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondrial morphologies. Together, these findings identify autosomal recessive TMEM63C variants as a cause of pure and complex HSP and add to the growing evidence of a fundamental pathomolecular role of perturbed mitochondrial-endoplasmic reticulum dynamics in motor neurone degenerative diseases.
Keyphrases
- endoplasmic reticulum
- intellectual disability
- heat shock protein
- cerebral palsy
- heat shock
- botulinum toxin
- heat stress
- lower limb
- autism spectrum disorder
- oxidative stress
- upper limb
- copy number
- multiple sclerosis
- spinal cord injury
- genome wide
- binding protein
- dna methylation
- amino acid
- single cell
- single molecule
- cerebral ischemia
- high speed
- cell death
- muscular dystrophy