MCAT Mutations Cause Nuclear LHON-like Optic Neuropathy.
Sylvie GerberChristophe OrssaudJosseline KaplanCatrine JohanssonJean-Michel RozetPublished in: Genes (2021)
Pathological variants in the nuclear malonyl-CoA-acyl carrier protein transacylase (MCAT) gene, which encodes a mitochondrial protein involved in fatty-acid biogenesis, have been reported in two siblings from China affected by insidious optic nerve degeneration in childhood, leading to blindness in the first decade of life. After analysing 51 families with negative molecular diagnostic tests, from a cohort of 200 families with hereditary optic neuropathy (HON), we identified two novel MCAT mutations in a female patient who presented with acute, sudden, bilateral, yet asymmetric, central visual loss at the age of 20. This presentation is consistent with a Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON)-like phenotype, whose existence and association with NDUFS2 and DNAJC30 has only recently been described. Our findings reveal a wider phenotypic presentation of MCAT mutations, and a greater genetic heterogeneity of nuclear LHON-like phenotypes. Although MCAT pathological variants are very uncommon, this gene should be investigated in HON patients, irrespective of disease presentation.
Keyphrases
- copy number
- case report
- genome wide
- fatty acid
- optic nerve
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- liver failure
- oxidative stress
- dna methylation
- protein protein
- ejection fraction
- amino acid
- intensive care unit
- optical coherence tomography
- patient reported outcomes
- intellectual disability
- transcription factor
- prognostic factors
- respiratory failure
- young adults
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- early life
- mass spectrometry
- hepatitis b virus
- childhood cancer