Neuroacanthocytosis Syndromes in an Italian Cohort: Clinical Spectrum, High Genetic Variability and Muscle Involvement.
Alessandro VaisfeldGiorgia BrunoMartina PetraccaAnna Rita BentivoglioSerenella ServideiMaria Gabriella VitaFrancesco BoveGiulia StracciaClemente DatoGiuseppe Di IorioSimone SampaoloSilvio PelusoAnna De RosaGiuseppe De MicheleMelissa BarghigianiDaniele GalatoloAlessandra TessaFilippo SantorelliPietro ChiurazziMariarosa Anna Beatrice MelonePublished in: Genes (2021)
Neuroacanthocytosis (NA) syndromes are a group of genetically defined diseases characterized by the association of red blood cell acanthocytosis, progressive degeneration of the basal ganglia and neuromuscular features with characteristic persistent hyperCKemia. The main NA syndromes include autosomal recessive chorea-acanthocytosis (ChAc) and X-linked McLeod syndrome (MLS). A series of Italian patients selected through a multicenter study for these specific neurological phenotypes underwent DNA sequencing of the VPS13A and XK genes to search for causative mutations. Where it has been possible, muscle biopsies were obtained and thoroughly investigated with histochemical assays. A total of nine patients from five different families were diagnosed with ChAC and had mostly biallelic changes in the VPS13A gene (three nonsense, two frameshift, three splicing), while three patients from a single X-linked family were diagnosed with McLeod syndrome and had a deletion in the XK gene. Despite a very low incidence (only one thousand cases of ChAc and a few hundred MLS cases reported worldwide), none of the 8 VPS13A variants identified in our patients is shared by two families, suggesting the high genetic variability of ChAc in the Italian population. In our series, in line with epidemiological data, McLeod syndrome occurs less frequently than ChAc, although it can be easily suspected because of its X-linked mode of inheritance. Finally, histochemical studies strongly suggest that muscle pathology is not simply secondary to the axonal neuropathy, frequently seen in these patients, but primary myopathic alterations can be detected in both NA syndromes.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- genome wide
- skeletal muscle
- multiple sclerosis
- red blood cell
- risk factors
- spinal cord injury
- blood brain barrier
- dna methylation
- big data
- mitochondrial dna
- autism spectrum disorder
- single cell
- optical coherence tomography
- high resolution
- single molecule
- case report
- case control