| Literature DB >> 23409136 |
Atsushi Ishii1, Yoshiaki Saito, Jun Mitsui, Hiroyuki Ishiura, Jun Yoshimura, Hidee Arai, Sumimasa Yamashita, Sadami Kimura, Hirokazu Oguni, Shinichi Morishita, Shoji Tsuji, Masayuki Sasaki, Shinichi Hirose.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Alternating hemiplegia of childhood (AHC) is a rare disorder characterized by transient repeated attacks of paresis and cognitive impairment. Recent studies from the U.S. and Europe have described ATP1A3 mutations in AHC. However, the genotype-phenotype relationship remains unclear. The purpose of this study was to identify the genetic abnormality in a Japanese cohort of AHC using exome analysis. PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23409136 PMCID: PMC3568031 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0056120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Pipeline for detection of novel de novo mutations.
The pipeline was used to identify pathogenic mutations of alternating hemiplegia of childhood (AHC). All genetic variants detected by exome sequencing are sequentially filtered through the pipeline. First, variations are screened according to databases of registered single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) and only non-registered SNP undergo the next selection as “Novel variants”. In the next step, non-synonymous novel variants of genes expressed in the central nervous system are selected. When variations of the same gene are found in the patient, the impact of such variation is evaluated in silico using Grantham score and PolyPhen-2. Mutations identified at this stage are reconfirmed by Sanger sequence. De novo mutation is validated by analyzing samples from parents. Mutations considered pathogenic are sought in other patients with AHC if necessary.
Distribution of novel non-synonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms including brain-expressed genes in eight patients with AHC.
| Patient ID | Total | Novel | |||||
| Variant | Gene | Variant | Variant (NS/SS) | Gene (NS/SS) | Brain expressed variant (NS/SS) | Brain expressed gene (NS/SS) | |
| I-1 | 229,647 | 5,590 | 6,195 | 282 | 270 | 77 | 75 |
| II-1 | 200,443 | 5,656 | 5,934 | 316 | 299 | 86 | 82 |
| III-1 | 125,855 | 5,489 | 4,304 | 342 | 327 | 100 | 93 |
| IV-1 | 251,550 | 5,701 | 7,568 | 405 | 376 | 129 | 118 |
| V-1 | 174,045 | 5,503 | 6,251 | 323 | 302 | 95 | 91 |
| VI-1 | 231,603 | 5,744 | 6,785 | 402 | 388 | 111 | 108 |
| VII-1 | 177,446 | 5,613 | 5,344 | 330 | 313 | 101 | 96 |
| VIII-1 | 178,175 | 5,608 | 4,767 | 295 | 282 | 78 | 77 |
| Total | 712,558 | 1,3517 | 39,414 | 2,449 | 2,131 | 718 | 630 |
NS: non-synonymous variants, SS: splice-site acceptor/donor variants.
ATP1A3 variants found in eight individuals with AHC.
| Patient | Chromosome (position) | Exon | SNV | Amino acid change |
| I-1 | 19 (42479781) | 16 | c. 2263 G>T | G755C |
| II-1 | 19 (42474436) | 18 | c. 2443 G>A | E815K |
| III-1 | 19 (42474436) | 18 | c. 2443 G>A | E815K |
| IV-1 | 19 (42474436) | 18 | c. 2443 G>A | E815K |
| V-1 | 19 (42472976) | 20 | c. 2780 G>A | C927Y |
| VI-1 | 19 (42474557) | 17 | c. 2401 G>A |
|
| VII-1 | 19 (42474557) | 17 | c. 2401 G>A |
|
| VIII-1 | 19 (42474557) | 17 | c. 2401 G>A |
|
SNV: single nucleotide variation,
D801N was initially not considered a novel mutation but confirmed later by re-analysis.
Figure 2Chromatograms of four de novo mutations identified in ATP1A3.
Data were obtained by Sanger sequencing during the confirmation process. In trio of each pedigree, black shadow represents the proband. In the chromatograms, Black letters show exonic nucleotide sequences, gray letters show intronic nucleotide sequences. Amino acids are shown in a single letter notation. Nucleotides and amino acids in red indicate mutations. (A) G755C was identified only in Patient I-1. (B) E815K was identified in Patients II-1, III-1, IV-1, IX-1 and X-1. (C) C927Y was identified in Patient V-1 only. (D) D801N was identified in Patients VI-1, VII-1 and VIII-1. None of the mutations was detected in the father or mother except for Patient IX-1, whose parents refused to undergo genetic analysis.
Clinical data of 10 unrelated individuals with AHC.
| Patient ID | I-1 | II-1 | III-1 | IV-1 | V-1 | VI-1 | VII-1 | VIII-1 | IX-1 | X-1 |
| Mutations | G755C | E815K | E815K | E815K | C927Y | D801N | D801N | D801N | E815K | E815K |
| Age (year)/sex | 18/male | 13/male | 32/female | 6/male | 16/female | 17/male | 9/male | 12/male | 9/male | 1/male |
| Age at onset (day) | 60 | 17 | 2 | 1 | 60 | 1 | 120 | 0 | Infant | Neonatal |
| Age at onset of paralysis (month) | 6 | 10 | 12 | 4 | 12 | 4 | 9 | 9 | Infant | 9 |
| Initial symptoms/signs | L versive movement of neck, monocular deviation of L eye to the left | Tonic fits | Tonic fits | Upward gaze, tonic fits | Nystagmus, ocular deviation to right | Nystagmus, focal clonic seizure | Clonic seizure | Nystagmus | Apnea | Nystagmus, downward gaze, tonic fits |
| Paralytic type | Flaccid | Flaccid | Flaccid | Flaccid | Rigid | Flaccid | Flaccid | Flaccid | Flaccid | Flaccid |
| Paralytic symptoms | Paralysis of unilateral arm or leg on R or L, or hemiparesis, sometimes continues with shift to opposite side. Rarely quadriplegia. | Paralysis of unilateral arm or leg on R or L, or hemiparesis, sometimes shifts to opposite side. Rarely quadriplegia. | Hemiparesis. Sometimes quadriplegia. No episodic paralysis since stabilizing of quadriplegia at 14 years. | Paralysis or hemiparesis of R arm. | Rigidity of R arm. Alternating flaccid hemiplegia since 1 year of age. | Alternating hemiparesis every 2–3 months | Alternating hemiplegia (R>L), only a few days every month. | R or L unilateral arm or leg paralysis, sometimes systemic paralysis. Tendency to occur following tonic fits. | Quadriplegia with/without bulbar palsy, for a few min to several hrs every day. Sometimes hemiplegia. Sometimes paralysis shifts to other parts. | Exterior ocular deviation on R side. Systemic cataplexy. Alternating paraparesis |
| Other neurological abnormalities | Choreoathetosis, aphonia | Choreoathetosis, facial dyskinesia | Dystonia, oral or facial dyskinesia | Aphonia | Spastic diplegia | None | Left hemidystonia | Dystonia | Dystonia | Head lag, nystagmus, ocular deviation |
| Motor development | walks alone | stands with support | walks with support | sits alone | walks alone | walks alone | walks alone | walks with support | Unable to sit | rolling over |
| Intellectual development | two words | only words | only words | no words | Normal | three phrases | three word phrases | only words | No words | delay |
| Regression | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | No |
| Epilepsy | 4 years | 2 years | 4 years | None | None | None | 4months | 8 years | Yes | 9months |
| Epileptic status | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Headache | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | unknown | unknown |
| Head MRI | Normal | Cerebellar atrophy | Cerebellar atrophy | Normal | Mild enlargement of inferior horns bilaterally | Normal | Normal | High intensity in hippocampus | N/A | Normal |
| Respiratory status | Apnea | Normal | Use of ventilator | Apnea | Normal | Normal | Normal | Apnea | Apnea | Apnea |
| Effective drugs for paralysis | flunarizine | CZP | CZP, flunarizine | flunarizine | CZP | flunarizine | flunarizine | flunarizine | none (flunarizine not tried) | MDL |
| Family history | None | None | None | Headache, epilepsy | None | None | Migraine | Headache, epilepsy | Headache | None |
| Gestational age | 40 weeks | 34 weeks 3days | 42 weeks | 40 weeks | unknown | 41 weeks 4 days | 39 weeks 3 days | 41 weeks | 40 weeks | 37 weeks 3 days |
| Birth weight (g) | 3148 | 2218 | 3260 | 3392 | unknown | 3526 | 3200 | 3008 | 3550 | 2962 |
| Asphyxia | None | No crying unless stimulated | Unknown | None | unknown | None | unknown | None | None | None |
MDL: midazolam, CZP: clonazepam, L: left, R: right.
Figure 3ATP1A3 mutations and their protein domain structures.
Black lined circle: Mutations reported recently [10], [11]. Red colored circle: Mutations identified in the present study in a Japanese cohort with AHC. The ATP1A3 gene consists of 23 exons that encode several domains in the ATP1A3 protein molecule, including 6 cytoplasmic, 10 helical and 5 extracellular domains. G755C and E815K were located in the cytoplasmic domains. Notably, E815K was resident of the transmembrane domain rather than the cytoplasmic domain. D801N and C927Y were located in the helical domains. C927Y was identified in this study only and hence considered novel.
Figure 4Homologous comparison of altering-protein.
Blue letters: altering-protein by mutation, red letters: differential protein with human. (A) G755C changed by novel SNVs (c.2263G>T) of ATP1A3 in Patient I-1. (B) E815K changed by novel SNVs (c.2443 G>A) of ATP1A3 in Patients II-1, III-1, IV-1, IX-1 and X-1. (C) C927Y changed by novel SNVs (c.2780 G>A) of ATP1A3 in Patient V-1. (D) D801N changed by novel SNVs (c.2401 G>A) of ATP1A3 in Patient VI-1, VII-1 and VIII-1.