Novel stop-gain RNF170 variation detected in a Chinese family with adolescent-onset hereditary spastic paraplegia.
Jing-Xin FuQiao WeiYu-Lan ChenHong-Fu LiPublished in: Clinical genetics (2022)
Hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) is a heterogeneous group of inherited neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressive lower limb spasticity. Recent studies revealed that biallelic variants in RNF170 gene cause autosomal recessive complicated HSP with infancy onset. Here, we report an adolescent-onset HSP patient from a consanguineous Chinese family, with lower extremity stiffness, spastic gait, and unstable straight-line walking as the main manifestations. Whole-exome sequencing identifies a novel RNF170 mutation c.190C>T (p.R64*), which co-segregates with the disease in this pedigree. Functional analysis, including quantitative real-time PCR (RT-qPCR) and Western blot, indicates that both the mRNA and protein levels of mutant RNF170 are significantly reduced, which confirms the loss-of-function mechanism. Our study expands the spectrum of RNF170-associated HSP, while the RNF170 protein-involved degradation of the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor in neurodegenerative motor neuron disorders deserves further investigation.
Keyphrases
- cerebral palsy
- heat shock protein
- lower limb
- heat shock
- dna damage response
- heat stress
- botulinum toxin
- upper limb
- young adults
- mental health
- binding protein
- intellectual disability
- genome wide
- copy number
- multiple sclerosis
- real time pcr
- spinal cord injury
- case report
- south africa
- protein protein
- weight loss
- transcription factor
- wild type