| Literature DB >> 28187749 |
Maja Tarailo-Graovac1,2,3, Britt I Drögemöller1,2,4, Wyeth W Wasserman1,2,3, Colin J D Ross1,2,4, Ans M W van den Ouweland5, Niklas Darin6, Gittan Kollberg7, Clara D M van Karnebeek8,9,10,11, Maria Blomqvist12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sialic acid storage diseases are neurodegenerative disorders characterized by accumulation of sialic acid in the lysosome. These disorders are caused by mutations in SLC17A5, the gene encoding sialin, a sialic acid transporter located in the lysosomal membrane. The most common form of sialic acid storage disease is the slowly progressive Salla disease, presenting with hypotonia, ataxia, epilepsy, nystagmus and findings of cerebral and cerebellar atrophy. Hypomyelination and corpus callosum hypoplasia are typical as well. We report a 16 year-old boy with an atypically mild clinical phenotype of sialic acid storage disease characterized by psychomotor retardation and a mixture of spasticity and rigidity but no ataxia, and only weak features of hypomyelination and thinning of corpus callosum on MRI of the brain.Entities:
Keywords: SLC17A5; Salla disease; Sialic acid storage disease; Transposon insertion; Whole exome sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28187749 PMCID: PMC5303239 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-017-0584-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1Axial T2 sequences showed slightly increased T2 signal in supratentorial central white matter (a) while the cerebellar white matter looked normal (b). Axial T1-weighted imaging showed normally signaling supratentorial white matter (c). Sagittal T2-weighted imaging revealed a somewhat thin corpus callosum and a small cyst (1.2 cm) of the corpus pineale (d)
Sialic acid in urine and fibroblasts
| Analyte | Sampling 1 | Sampling 2 | Normal range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sialic acid (total)—urine | 68 | 69 | 31–69 |
| Sialic acid (free) urine | 60 | 57 | 7–21 |
| Sialic acid (free) fibroblasts | 16 | - | <1,3 |
Fig. 2Genetic analyses. RT-PCR followed by gel electrophoresis of products spanning cDNA position c.1130 – c.1646 in the SLC17A5 gene showing two extra fragments of abnormal size in addition to the expected 517 bp fragment in the patient. The abnormal transcripts were absent in the control sample (a). RNA was extracted from cultured skin fibroblasts. Direct sequencing of the 620 bp fragment revealed an apparently homozygous insertion of 106 bp in length, where the first 24 bp corresponded to an intronic sequence immediately adjacent to the exon 9 splice site, followed by an 82 bp sequence corresponding to position 6033-5952 of the transposable element KF425758.1 (b)
Fig. 3Sequencing of this ~6 kb fragment confirmed the presence of a 6040 bp LINE-1 retrotransposon, which was inserted in intron 9 (a). PCR analyses confirmed that the unaffected parents were heterozygous for this insertion, while the index was homozygous (b)
Fig. 4Splice site analyses using NetGene2 and ASSP, revealed that in the presence of the insertion, in addition to the correct splice-site occurring at the exon- intron boundary, a further two splice sites are present in the insertion (a). These alternate splicing events result in a frameshift mutation, which results in a premature stop codon at amino acid 421, indicated by the arrow (b). Grey shading indicated the 12 transmembrane regions of the sialin protein