肌张力障碍
遗传学
基因
表型
等位基因
生物
等位基因频率
突变
神经科学
作者
Mirja Thomsen,Katrin Marth,Sebastian Loens,Judith Everding,Johanna Junker,Friederike Borngräber,Fabian Ott,Silvia Jesús,Mathias Gelderblom,Thorsten Odorfer,Gregor Kuhlenbäumer,Han‐Joon Kim,Eva Schaeffer,Jos Becktepe,Meike Kasten,Norbert Brüggemann,Robert M. Pfister,Katja Kollewe,Joachim K. Krauss,Ebba Lohmann
摘要
Abstract Background Pathogenic variants in several genes have been linked to genetic forms of isolated or combined dystonia. The phenotypic and genetic spectrum and the frequency of pathogenic variants in these genes have not yet been fully elucidated, neither in patients with dystonia nor with other, sometimes co‐occurring movement disorders such as Parkinson's disease (PD). Objectives To screen >2000 patients with dystonia or PD for rare variants in known dystonia‐causing genes. Methods We screened 1207 dystonia patients from Germany (DysTract consortium), Spain, and South Korea, and 1036 PD patients from Germany for pathogenic variants using a next‐generation sequencing gene panel. The impact on DNA methylation of KMT2B variants was evaluated by analyzing the gene's characteristic episignature. Results We identified 171 carriers (109 with dystonia [9.0%]; 62 with PD [6.0%]) of 131 rare variants (minor allele frequency <0.005). A total of 52 patients (48 dystonia [4.0%]; four PD [0.4%, all with GCH1 variants]) carried 33 different (likely) pathogenic variants, of which 17 were not previously reported. Pathogenic biallelic variants in PRKRA were not found. Episignature analysis of 48 KMT2B variants revealed that only two of these should be considered (likely) pathogenic. Conclusion This study confirms pathogenic variants in GCH1 , GNAL , KMT2B , SGCE , THAP1 , and TOR1A as relevant causes in dystonia and expands the mutational spectrum. Of note, likely pathogenic variants only in GCH1 were also found among PD patients. For DYT‐KMT2B, the recently described episignature served as a reliable readout to determine the functional effect of newly identified variants. © 2024 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
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