| Literature DB >> 22235333 |
Milen Velinov1, Natalia Dolzhanskaya, Michael Gonzalez, Eric Powell, Ioanna Konidari, William Hulme, John F Staropoli, Winnie Xin, Guang Y Wen, Rosemary Barone, Scott H Coppel, Katherine Sims, W Ted Brown, Stephan Züchner.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinoses (NCL) comprise at least nine progressive neurodegenerative genetic disorders. Kufs disease, an adult-onset form of NCL may be recessively or dominantly inherited. Our study aimed to identify genetic mutations associated with autosomal dominant Kufs disease (ADKD). METHODOLOGY AND PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22235333 PMCID: PMC3250487 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0029729
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Updated pedigree of the Parry family.
Individuals included in this study are indicated with star symbols on top of individual's number. The proband is marked with an arrow. One of the individuals in generation V was marked V-1A in order to match the individual numbers with the ones in the initially published Parry pedigree, reference 5.
Clinical manifestations in probands from the families or sporadic affected individuals included in the study.
| Proband ID | Clinical summary | Family history |
| P-VI-2 (Parry) | See text | See |
| BD 319 | The early growth and development were normal. Seizures and gradual dementia started in mid 30 s. Interictal EEG was abnormal. No vision problems were reported. Neuropsychological testing revealed borderline cognitive functioning. Tendencies for denial and presenting himself in an overly favorable light were noted on psychological evaluation. Difficulties speaking, ataxia and involuntary movements developed in early 40 s. At 46 he had difficulties swallowing. Patient died at the age of 54 years. | No affected family relatives were reported |
| BD 303 | At the age of 32 started having headaches, memory problems, difficulties speaking and coordination problems. No vision impairment was reported. Interictal EEG was abnormal, but no clinical seizure activity was observed. Brain MRI showed diffuse brain atrophy. Patient died at the age of 36. | This patient's father, paternal grandmother and brother were affected with similar progressive neurodegenerative disorder and died in their 30 s.or early 40 s |
| BD 160 | In her mid 20 s this individual started having difficulties speaking, ataxia and seizures. The patient died at the age of 38. | The patient's brother and father had similar manifestations |
| KUF01CH | At 38 years of age this patient developed myoclonus and anxiety disorder. The interictal EEG was normal. | The patient's father developed involuntary movements, ataxia and memory loss in his 70 s |
| KUF04SR | Absence seizures started at the age of 5, episodic tremors started in the 20 s, generalized seizures since 28 and intellectual decline documented at 31. See also reference 6. | Autosomal-dominat (see reference 6) |
| BD-AW | This individual died at the age of 26 from progressive neurodegenerative disorder starting in her 20 s. | No other affected relatives were reported |
| BD-SS | Learning, speaking and walking difficulties and involuntary movements started at the age of 15. No vision impairment was reported. Seizures started at 23. Brain MRI showed cerebral atrophy. | No other affected relatives were reported |
| BD-185 | Seizures and memory loss started at 16. | No other affected relatives were reported |
Figure 2Laboratory studies of some of the individuals studied.
a) EM study of peripheral lymphocytes of the proband of the Parry family showing storage inclusions with morphology of GROD (arrows). Higher magnification of the area is shown in the upper right corner. b) Neuropathology study of the father of individual KUF01CH showing neuronal accumulation, throughout the CNS, of PAS-positive material with strong, broad-range autofluorescence.
Laboratory, neuropathology studies and DNAJC5 mutation status of probands from the families included in the study.
| Proband ID | Peripheral cell studies | Neuropathology studies | DNAJC5 gene change | PRPF6 gene change |
| P-VI-2 (Parry) | See text | See text and reference 5 | pLeu116del | pAsn477Ser |
| BD-319 | Not available | Brain biopsy at the age of 38: microscopy showed neuronal storage material that stained intensely with PAS stain and was autofluorescent under fluorescent light.EM | pLeu115Arg | negative |
| BD-303 | EM in fibroblasts showed curvilinear bodies and lipofuscin granules | Post mortem brain neuropathology reportedly confirmed the diagnosis of Kufs disease | negative | negative |
| BD-160 | EM demonstrated GROD inclusions in fibroblasts. | Brain autopsy showed GROD inclusions in neuronal cells. | negative | negative |
| KUF01CH | Rectilinear and GROD in peripheral lymphocytes ( | Postmortem neuropathology study of the patient's father showed PAS positive inclusions and granular osmiophilic inclusions in neuronal cells in electron microscopy | negative | negative |
| KUF04SR | Not available | Brain neuropathology: microscopy: PAS positive, autofluorescent neuronal inclusions; electron microscopy: osmiophilic inclusions with rectilinear or curvilinear morphology | negative | negative |
| BD-AW | Not available | Postmortem electron microscopy study of brain tissue showed fingerprint and curvilinear inclusions | negative | negative |
| BD-SS | Normal study of peripheral lymphocytes and fibroblasts at the age of 24. | Brain biopsy: microscopy: PAS positive and autofluorescent storage material. EM: positive for osmiophilic neuronal inclusions. | negative | negative |
| BD-185 | Not available | Brain neuropathology (brain biopsy) PAS positive and autofluorescent neuronal inclusions. EM showed osmiophillic inclusions | negative | negative |
*EM = Electron microscopy;
**GROD = Granular osmophilic deposits.
Figure 3Identification of DNA variants in DNAJC5 and PRPF6.
a) Schematic of the region on chromosome 20 containing DNAJC5 and PRPF6 in close proximity. b) Sanger sequence traces of the identified segregating variants in DNAJC5 and PRPF6. c) The two very rare changes identified in the Parry family Leu116del (in DNAJC5) and N477S (in PRPF6) were highly conserved in different species. A second change in DNAJC5, Leu115Arg, was also highly conserved.
Haplotype reconstruction with genetic markers in DNAJC5.
| Leu116del | ||||||
| Parry VI:2 | Parry V:27 | Parry V:28 | Parry associated haplotype | UCL519 | P1 | |
| rs2065993 | A/A | A/G | A/G | A | G/A | G/G |
| rs2247381 | G/G | A/G | A/G | G | A/G | A/A |
| rs2427546 | C/C | T/C | T/C | C | T/C | T/T |
| rs2427547 | G/G | A/G | G/G | G | A/G | A/A |
| rs2427550 | A/A | C/A | C/A | A | C/A | C/C |
| rs2427551 | G/G | A/G | A/G | G | A/G | A/A |
| rs2427552 | G/A | G/G | G/G | G | G/G | G/G |
| rs6011225 | C/C | A/C | C/C | C | C/C | A/A |
| rs2427549 | C/C | C/T | C/T | C | C/C | C/C |
| rs2427548 | T/T | C/T | C/T | T | C/C | C/C |
| rs2427553 | A/A | C/A | C/A | A | C/A | C/C |
| rs6062586 | T/T | C/T | C/T | T | C/C | C/C |
| rs6122041 | C/C | T/C | T/C | C | T/C | T/T |
| rs2427554 | A/A | G/A | G/A | A | G/A | G/G |
| rs6011226 | A/A | T/A | T/A | A | T/A | T/T |
| DNAJC6 | Leu116del | Leu116del | Leu116del | Leu116del | Leu116del | Leu116del |
Two informative homozygous discordant genotypes close to the Leu116del change indicate that the Parry family does not share a haplotype with either of the two families reported in Noskova et al supporting a mutational hotspot rather than a founder effect. Grey: Noskova et al [4] haplotypes; Red: Discordant homozygous genotypes; all markers appear in their genomic order from centromere to telomere.
Haplotype reconstruction with genetic markers in DNAJC5.
| Leu115Arg | ||||
| BD319 | UCL328 | N1 | UCL563 | |
| rs2065993 | A/A | genotypes; all markers appear in their genomic order from centromere to telomere.A/A | G/G | G/G |
| rs2247381 | G/G | G/G | A/A | A/A |
| rs2427546 | C/C | C/C | T/T | T/T |
| rs2427547 | G/G | G/G | A/G | A/A |
| rs2427550 | A/A | A/A | C/C | C/C |
| rs2427551 | G/G | G/G | A/A | A/A |
| rs2427552 | G/A | G/A | G/G | G/G |
| rs6011225 | C/C | n/a | A/C | C/C |
| rs2427549 | C/C | n/a | C/C | C/C |
| rs2427548 | T/T | n/a | C/C | C/C |
| rs2427553 | A/A | C/C | C/C | C/C |
| rs6062586 | T/T | C/C | C/C | C/C |
| rs6122041 | C/C | C/C | T/T | T/T |
| rs2427554 | A/A | A/A | G/G | G/G |
| rs6011226 | A/A | A/A | T/T | T/T |
| DNAJC5 | Leu115Arg | Leu115Arg | Leu115Arg | Leu115Arg |
Three homozygous discordant genotypes close to the Leu115Arg change indicate that family BD319 does not share a haplotype with the three families reported in Noskova et al supporting a mutational hotspot rather than a founder effect. Grey: Noskova et al haplotypes; Red: Discordant homozygous genotypes; all markers appear in their genomic order from centromere to telomere.