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Variant recurrence confirms the existence of a FBXO31-related spastic-dystonic cerebral palsy syndrome.

Ivana DzinovicMatej ŠkorvánekPetra PavelekovaChen ZhaoBoris KerenSandra WhalenSomayeh BakhtiariSheng Chih JinMichael C KruerRobert JechJuliane WinkelmannMichael Zech
Published in: Annals of clinical and translational neurology (2021)
The role of genetics in the causation of cerebral palsy has become the focus of many studies aiming to unravel the heterogeneous etiology behind this frequent neurodevelopmental disorder. A recent paper reported two unrelated children with a clinical diagnosis of cerebral palsy, who carried the same de novo c.1000G > A (p.Asp334Asn) variant in FBXO31, encoding a widely studied tumor suppressor not previously implicated in monogenic disease. We now identified a third individual with the recurrent FBXO31 de novo missense variant, featuring a spastic-dystonic phenotype. Our data confirm a link between variant FBXO31 and an autosomal dominant neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by prominent motor dysfunction.
Keyphrases
  • cerebral palsy
  • young adults
  • oxidative stress
  • electronic health record
  • intellectual disability
  • big data
  • deep learning
  • artificial intelligence
  • solid state
  • data analysis