| Literature DB >> 28561207 |
Gillian I Rice1, Naoki Kitabayashi2,3, Magalie Barth4, Tracy A Briggs1,5, Annabel C E Burton6, Maria Luisa Carpanelli7, Alfredo M Cerisola8, Cindy Colson9, Russell C Dale10, Federica Rachele Danti11,12,13, Niklas Darin14, Begoña De Azua15, Valentina De Giorgis16, Christian G L De Goede17, Isabelle Desguerre18, Corinne De Laet19, Atieh Eslahi20, Michael C Fahey21, Penny Fallon22, Alex Fay23, Elisa Fazzi24, Mark P Gorman25, Nirmala Rani Gowrinathan26, Marie Hully18, Manju A Kurian11,12, Nicolas Leboucq27, Jean-Pierre S-M Lin28, Matthew A Lines29, Soe S Mar30, Reza Maroofian31, Laura Martí-Sanchez32, Gary McCullagh33, Majid Mojarrad20, Vinodh Narayanan34, Simona Orcesi16, Juan Dario Ortigoza-Escobar32, Belén Pérez-Dueñas32, Florence Petit9, Keri M Ramsey34, Magnhild Rasmussen35, François Rivier36,37, Pilar Rodríguez-Pombo38, Agathe Roubertie36,39, Tommy I Stödberg40, Mehran Beiraghi Toosi41, Annick Toutain42, Florence Uettwiller43,44, Nicole Ulrick45, Adeline Vanderver45, Amy Waldman45, John H Livingston46, Yanick J Crow1,2,3.
Abstract
We investigated the genetic, phenotypic, and interferon status of 46 patients from 37 families with neurological disease due to mutations in ADAR1. The clinicoradiological phenotype encompassed a spectrum of Aicardi-Goutières syndrome, isolated bilateral striatal necrosis, spastic paraparesis with normal neuroimaging, a progressive spastic dystonic motor disorder, and adult-onset psychological difficulties with intracranial calcification. Homozygous missense mutations were recorded in five families. We observed a p.Pro193Ala variant in the heterozygous state in 22 of 23 families with compound heterozygous mutations. We also ascertained 11 cases from nine families with a p.Gly1007Arg dominant-negative mutation, which occurred de novo in four patients, and was inherited in three families in association with marked phenotypic variability. In 50 of 52 samples from 34 patients, we identified a marked upregulation of type I interferon-stimulated gene transcripts in peripheral blood, with a median interferon score of 16.99 (interquartile range [IQR]: 10.64-25.71) compared with controls (median: 0.93, IQR: 0.57-1.30). Thus, mutations in ADAR1 are associated with a variety of clinically distinct neurological phenotypes presenting from early infancy to adulthood, inherited either as an autosomal recessive or dominant trait. Testing for an interferon signature in blood represents a useful biomarker in this context. Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28561207 PMCID: PMC5985975 DOI: 10.1055/s-0037-1601449
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropediatrics ISSN: 0174-304X Impact factor: 1.947