| Literature DB >> 24535567 |
Kishore R Kumar1, Katja Lohmann2, Ikuo Masuho3, Ryosuke Miyamoto4, Andreas Ferbert5, Thora Lohnau2, Meike Kasten2, Johann Hagenah2, Norbert Brüggemann2, Julia Graf2, Alexander Münchau6, Vladimir S Kostic7, Carolyn M Sue8, Aloysius R Domingo9, Raymond L Rosales10, Lilian V Lee11, Karen Freimann2, Ana Westenberger2, Youhei Mukai4, Toshitaka Kawarai4, Ryuji Kaji4, Christine Klein2, Kirill A Martemyanov3, Alexander Schmidt2.
Abstract
IMPORTANCE: Mutations in the GNAL gene have recently been shown to cause primary torsion dystonia. The GNAL-encoded protein (Gαolf) is important for dopamine D1 receptor function and odorant signal transduction. We sequenced all 12 exons of GNAL in 461 patients from Germany, Serbia, and Japan, including 318 patients with dystonia (190 with cervical dystonia), 51 with hyposmia and Parkinson disease, and 92 with tardive dyskinesia or acute dystonic reactions. OBSERVATIONS: We identified the following two novel heterozygous putative mutations in GNAL: p.Gly213Ser in a German patient and p.Ala353Thr in a Japanese patient. These variants were predicted to be pathogenic in silico, were absent in ethnically matched control individuals, and impaired Gαolf coupling to D1 receptors in a bioluminescence energy transfer (BRET) assay. Two additional variants appeared to be benign because they behaved like wild-type samples in the BRET assay (p.Ala311Thr) or were detected in ethnically matched controls (p.Thr92Ala). Both patients with likely pathogenic mutations had craniocervical dystonia with onset in the fifth decade of life. No pathogenic mutations were detected in the patients with hyposmia and Parkinson disease, tardive dyskinesias, or acute dystonic reactions. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Mutations in GNAL can cause craniocervical dystonia in different ethnicities. The BRET assay may be a useful tool to support the pathogenicity of identified variants in the GNAL gene.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24535567 PMCID: PMC4237020 DOI: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2013.4677
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Neurol ISSN: 2168-6149 Impact factor: 18.302