| Literature DB >> 27769300 |
Nadia A Akawi1,2, Salma Ben-Salem1, Jozef Hertecant1,3, Anne John1, Thachillath Pramathan4, Praseetha Kizhakkedath1, Bassam R Ali1, Lihadh Al-Gazali5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The group of ELAC2-related encephalomyopathies is a recent addition to the rapidly growing heterogeneous mitochondrial disorders.Entities:
Keywords: 5′ end unprocessed mt-RNAs; ELAC2; Intellectual disability; Mitochondrial disorder; Respiratory chain complex I (RCCI) deficiency; Splice site mutation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27769300 PMCID: PMC5073853 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-016-0526-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1Pedigree of the family and key clinical features of patient V10 in this study. a) The main characteristics of autosomal recessive inheritance including consanguinity and multiple affected children of both sexes can be seen in this pedigree. Circles and squares denote females and males respectively, filled symbols represent affected members, double lines denote consanguineous marriage. WT: wild-type; Mt: mutant for c.1423 + 2 T > A. b) a & b, Front and lateral facial photographs of patient V10 showing squint, bulbous nose, low set ears with simple helix and mild micrognathia. c, Asymmetric buttocks of patient V10 with the right side smaller and the fold is higher than the left. d, T1 saggital view showing cerebellar hypoplasia. e, T2 axial view showing diffuse increased signal in white matter
Fig. 2Genome-wide genotyping and sequencing results. a) Genome-wide homozygosity mapping analysis revealed one stretch of homozygous genotypes in all the investigated patients on chromosome17 (indicated by a red bar). b) Whole-exome sequencing IGV of the affected children V2 and V10 showing a 1 bp substitution of a canonical splice site in all reads of ELAC2 exon 15 . Sequence of wild type gene on reverse strand (-) and exon annotation at the bottom. c) Sanger sequencing verified that the c.1423 + 2 T > A mutation is homozygous in patients (Patient), heterozygous in parents and some of the unaffected siblings (Carriers) and absent in 100 normal controls (Normal)
Fig. 3Effect of the splicing mutation on ELAC2 expression and on selected mitochondrial genes. a) The amplification products of ELAC2 cDNA from patients, controls and parents were seen on a 2 % agarose gel. Bright bands were detected in the lanes of two healthy controls (C1 and C2) and the mother (IV4) at 500 bp (according to the DNA size marker M). Multiple fainter bands were seen in the patients’ (V10 and V11) lanes suggesting diminished expression of the normal WT transcript and the presence of other abnormal splicing products. b) Expression analysis of ELAC2 protein in patient fibroblasts. Total protein lysates from patient (V10) and two different control fibroblasts were analyzed for ELAC2 protein expression by immunoblotting against an antibody specific for ELAC2 isoform1. HEK293T cell lysate was used as a positive control. Mouse Tubulin antibody was used as a loading control. The levels of the protein was negligible in patient fibroblast compared to the control. Densitometric analysis of ELAC2 protein bands normalized to Tubulin levels, revealed that ELAC2 protein expression in patient fibroblasts was 14 % of that detected in control fibroblasts. c) A significant difference is seen between relative expressions of different unprocessed mitochondrial transcripts mtATP8, mtND2, and mtND4, in skin fibroblasts from patient V10, compared to four different control samples (Ctl1, Ctl2, Ctl5, and Ctl6). The mRNA expression values were normalized to an internal control HPRT. X axis depicts quantitative expression; Y axis represents bar chart for controls, and patient samples, respectively
Summary of clinical features of patients with ELAC2 mutations
| Families | F1 | F2 | F3 | F316 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethnic | German | Arabic | Turkish | Pakistani | ||||||
| Patients | #61525 (II-2) | #57415 (II-3) | #61982 (II-5) | #36355 (II-1) | #36355 (II-2) | V-2 | V-4 | V-5 | V-10a | V-11 |
| Sex | M | M | F | F | F | F | M | F | M | F |
| Clinical features | ||||||||||
| Microcephaly | + | + | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | + | + |
| Psychomotor retardation | + | + | ? | ? | ? | + | + | + | + | + |
| Muscle hypotonia | - | + | + | - | + | ? | ? | ? | + | + |
| HCM | + | + | + | + | + later DCM | ? | ? | ? | Mild septal Hypertrophy | Mild septal Hypertrophy |
| Brain MRI | NA | Hyper-intensities in basal ganglia | NA | NA | Normal at 20 months | NA | NA | NA | Reduced volume of cerebellar vermis + hemispheres | NA |
| Lactic acid level in blood | Increased | Increased | Increased | Increased | ? | NA | NA | NA | Slightly increased | NA |
| Mitoch. function in muscle | NA | Decreased complex I | Decreased complex I | Decreased complex I, IV | Decreased complex I, IV | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Course | death at 6 months | Alive at 2.10 years | death at 11 months | alive at 13 years | death at 4.9 years | alive at 19 years | alive at 17 years | alive at 15 years | alive at 4 years | alive at 2.5 years |
| mtDNA | normal | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | normal | NA |
| Zygosity | Compound Heterozygous | Homozygous | Homozygous | Homozygous | ||||||
| DNA change | c.[631C > T; 1559C > T] | c.460 T > C | c.1267C > T | c.1423 + 2 T > A | ||||||
| Protein change | p.[Arg211a; Thr520Ile] | p.Phe154Leu | p.Leu423Phe | frameshift | ||||||
| References | Haack et al. 2013 [ | This study | ||||||||
HCM hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, DCM dilated cardiomyopathy, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, Mitoch. mitochondrial. Abbreviations: M male, F female, + present, - absent, NA not available, a index patient, ? no materiel available