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POLG2-Linked Mitochondrial Disease: Functional Insights from New Mutation Carriers and Review of the Literature.

Max BorscheMarija Dulovic-MahlowHauke BaumannSinem TuncTheresa LüthSusen SchaakeSelin ÖzcakirAna WestenbergerAlexander MünchauEvelyn KnappeJoanne TrinhNorbert BrüggemannKatja Lohmann
Published in: Cerebellum (London, England) (2023)
Different pathogenic variants in the DNA polymerase-gamma2 (POLG2) gene cause a rare, clinically heterogeneous mitochondrial disease. We detected a novel POLG2 variant (c.1270 T > C, p.Ser424Pro) in a family with adult-onset cerebellar ataxia and progressive ophthalmoplegia. We demonstrated altered mitochondrial integrity in patients' fibroblast cultures but no changes of the mitochondrial DNA were found when compared to controls. We consider this novel, segregating POLG2 variant as disease-causing in this family. Moreover, we systematically screened the literature for POLG2-linked phenotypes and re-evaluated all mutations published to date for pathogenicity according to current knowledge. Thereby, we identified twelve published, likely disease-causing variants in 19 patients only. The core features included progressive ophthalmoplegia and cerebellar ataxia; parkinsonism, neuropathy, cognitive decline, and seizures were also repeatedly found in adult-onset heterozygous POLG2-related disease. A severe phenotype relates to biallelic pathogenic variants in POLG2, i.e., newborn-onset liver failure, referred to as mitochondrial depletion syndrome. Our work underlines the broad clinical spectrum of POLG2-related disease and highlights the importance of functional characterization of variants of uncertain significance to enable meaningful genetic counseling.
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