Literature DB >> 28971144

Autosomal recessive inheritance of ADCY5-related generalized dystonia and myoclonus.

Matthew J Barrett1, Eli S Williams1, Chelsea Chambers1, Radhika Dhamija1.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Year:  2017        PMID: 28971144      PMCID: PMC5612768          DOI: 10.1212/NXG.0000000000000193

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurol Genet        ISSN: 2376-7839


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Monoallelic ADCY5 mutations have been associated with a benign hereditary chorea-like phenotype and a mixed hyperkinetic syndrome with dystonia, chorea, and myoclonus.[1-4] We report 2 siblings with generalized dystonia and myoclonus associated with biallelic pathogenic variants in ADCY5 inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern.

Case report.

A 27-year-old woman presented with a movement disorder. She was born full term. She walked at 18 months, and speech development was delayed. Involuntary movements were first noted at 3 years with walking and increased in amplitude over time. Dystonia was first diagnosed at age 3. She had frequent falls due to involuntary myoclonic movements in the setting of lower extremity dystonia. Movements lessened with sleep and did not improve with alcohol or caffeine. Trihexyphenidyl, levodopa, clonazepam, and amantadine failed to provide benefit. On examination, she was found to have generalized dystonia with superimposed myoclonus. See video at Neurology.org/ng. Chromosomal microarray was negative. Alpha-fetoprotein and vitamin E levels were normal. Her 24-year-old brother was born at term and walked prior to 1 year. His speech development was delayed. After age 8, he developed cramping in his hands and neck. His gait worsened at age 15 secondary to worsening lower extremity dystonia following a growth spurt. Levodopa, clonazepam, gabapentin, propranolol, primidone, and topiramate did not provide benefit. His neurologic examination revealed generalized dystonia with superimposed myoclonus. See video. Creatine kinase, lactic acid, comprehensive metabolic panel, ceruloplasmin, and 24-hour urine copper levels were normal. No pathogenic variants or large deletions/duplications were found in SGCE. Brain MRI was unremarkable. There were no other siblings. Neither parent nor other relatives had a history of a movement disorder. Because of familial juvenile-onset generalized dystonia with myoclonus and previous negative evaluations, trio exome sequencing was pursued to establish a definitive diagnosis (Ambry Genetics Corp., Aliso Viejo, CA). Testing revealed the presence of a maternally inherited frameshift variant (c.409_428del20; p.G137Cfs*184) and a paternally inherited missense variant (c.3037C>T; p.R1013C) in ADCY5 (NM_183357). These alleles were confirmed in the proband's brother using Sanger sequencing.

Discussion.

ADCY5 mutations are believed to be inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion based on observations from the original pedigree: there were affected individuals in all 5 generations, complete penetrance in males and females, and evidence of male-to-male transmission.[5] Subsequent reported families confirmed autosomal dominant inheritance.[3,4] In addition, mutations described in ADCY5-related dyskinesia are recurrent, with the p.R418W and the p.A726T mutation described in multiple unrelated individuals.[1-3,6] Subsequent functional analysis characterized the effect of these mutations as gain of function: there was increased adenylyl cyclase activity in cells containing mutant ADCY5 compared with wild type.[6] However, in a previously reported family affected with autosomal dominant chorea and dystonia, a c.2088+1G>A splice site mutation segregated with disease.[4] Functional studies showed no expression of the variant allele and reduced expression of ADCY5 messenger RNA. It appears that both gain of function and haploinsufficiency may result in ADCY5-related dyskinesia. Here, we report 2 siblings with a phenotype of generalized dystonia and myoclonus associated with biallelic pathogenic variants in ADCY5. A phenotype of autosomal dominant myoclonus dystonia has been reported with ADCY5 mutations, and dystonia and myoclonus have been reported in other published cases.[7] Our cases differ from previously published cases because they inherited 2 pathogenic variants from unaffected parents, a paternally inherited missense variant and a maternally inherited frameshift variant. There is evidence supporting a role for both these variants in the clinical manifestation of disease. The paternal p.R1013C variant occurs at an evolutionarily conserved residue, is predicted to be damaging by PolyPhen and deleterious by scale-invariant feature transform, and is not present in over 60,000 individuals in the Exome Aggregation Consortium browser. These data together with cosegregation with the movement disorder phenotype suggest that p.R1013C is not a normal population variant and has clinical significance. We interpret the maternally inherited 20 base-pair deletion as a loss of function allele because it results in an early stop codon after 184 amino acids. In this family, both variants appear to be required for a movement disorder phenotype. The missense variant may result in a change in the function of adenylate cyclase that does not result in a phenotype in the presence of a wild-type allele. However, in the presence of a null allele, the mutant protein is insufficient to maintain adequate cyclic adenosine monophosphate levels resulting in dystonia and myoclonus. Autosomal recessive inheritance has also been reported for other genes typically associated with autosomal dominantly inherited dystonia, specifically THAP1 and GNAL.[8,9] This family expands the understanding of ADCY5-related dyskinesia by showing that certain pathogenic variants inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern may produce a phenotype identical to autosomal dominant mutations.
  9 in total

1.  Homozygous THAP1 mutations as cause of early-onset generalized dystonia.

Authors:  Susanne A Schneider; Alfredo Ramirez; Kaveh Shafiee; Frank J Kaiser; Alev Erogullari; Norbert Brüggemann; Susen Winkler; Ideh Bahman; Alma Osmanovic; Mohammad A Shafa; Kailish P Bhatia; Hossein Najmabadi; Christine Klein; Katja Lohmann
Journal:  Mov Disord       Date:  2011-03-21       Impact factor: 10.338

2.  A de novo ADCY5 mutation causes early-onset autosomal dominant chorea and dystonia.

Authors:  Raphael Carapito; Nicodème Paul; Meiggie Untrau; Marion Le Gentil; Louise Ott; Ghada Alsaleh; Pierre Jochem; Mirjana Radosavljevic; Cédric Le Caignec; Albert David; Philippe Damier; Bertrand Isidor; Seiamak Bahram
Journal:  Mov Disord       Date:  2014-12-27       Impact factor: 10.338

3.  ADCY5-related dyskinesia: Broader spectrum and genotype-phenotype correlations.

Authors:  Dong-Hui Chen; Aurélie Méneret; Jennifer R Friedman; Olena Korvatska; Alona Gad; Emily S Bonkowski; Holly A Stessman; Diane Doummar; Cyril Mignot; Mathieu Anheim; Saunder Bernes; Marie Y Davis; Nathalie Damon-Perrière; Bertrand Degos; David Grabli; Domitille Gras; Fuki M Hisama; Katherine M Mackenzie; Phillip D Swanson; Christine Tranchant; Marie Vidailhet; Steven Winesett; Oriane Trouillard; Laura M Amendola; Michael O Dorschner; Michael Weiss; Evan E Eichler; Ali Torkamani; Emmanuel Roze; Thomas D Bird; Wendy H Raskind
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2015-11-04       Impact factor: 9.910

4.  Gain-of-function ADCY5 mutations in familial dyskinesia with facial myokymia.

Authors:  Ying-Zhang Chen; Jennifer R Friedman; Dong-Hui Chen; Guy C-K Chan; Cinnamon S Bloss; Fuki M Hisama; Sarah E Topol; Andrew R Carson; Phillip H Pham; Emily S Bonkowski; Erick R Scott; Janel K Lee; Guangfa Zhang; Glenn Oliveira; Jian Xu; Ashley A Scott-Van Zeeland; Qi Chen; Samuel Levy; Eric J Topol; Daniel Storm; Phillip D Swanson; Thomas D Bird; Nicholas J Schork; Wendy H Raskind; Ali Torkamani
Journal:  Ann Neurol       Date:  2014-03-13       Impact factor: 10.422

5.  Autosomal dominant familial dyskinesia and facial myokymia: single exome sequencing identifies a mutation in adenylyl cyclase 5.

Authors:  Ying-Zhang Chen; Mark M Matsushita; Peggy Robertson; Mark Rieder; Santhosh Girirajan; Francesca Antonacci; Hillary Lipe; Evan E Eichler; Deborah A Nickerson; Thomas D Bird; Wendy H Raskind
Journal:  Arch Neurol       Date:  2012-05

6.  ADCY5-related dyskinesia presenting as familial myoclonus-dystonia.

Authors:  Andrew G L Douglas; Gaia Andreoletti; Kevin Talbot; Simon R Hammans; Jaspal Singh; Andrea Whitney; Sarah Ennis; Nicola C Foulds
Journal:  Neurogenetics       Date:  2017-02-22       Impact factor: 2.660

7.  ADCY5 mutations are another cause of benign hereditary chorea.

Authors:  Niccolo E Mencacci; Roberto Erro; Sarah Wiethoff; Joshua Hersheson; Mina Ryten; Bettina Balint; Christos Ganos; Maria Stamelou; Niall Quinn; Henry Houlden; Nicholas W Wood; Kailash P Bhatia
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2015-06-17       Impact factor: 9.910

8.  Phenotypic insights into ADCY5-associated disease.

Authors:  Florence C F Chang; Ana Westenberger; Russell C Dale; Martin Smith; Hardev S Pall; Belen Perez-Dueñas; Padraic Grattan-Smith; Robert A Ouvrier; Neil Mahant; Bernadette C Hanna; Matthew Hunter; John A Lawson; Christoph Max; Rani Sachdev; Esther Meyer; Dennis Crimmins; Donald Pryor; John G L Morris; Alex Münchau; Detelina Grozeva; Keren J Carss; Lucy Raymond; Manju A Kurian; Christine Klein; Victor S C Fung
Journal:  Mov Disord       Date:  2016-04-08       Impact factor: 10.338

9.  Homozygous GNAL mutation associated with familial childhood-onset generalized dystonia.

Authors:  Ikuo Masuho; Mingyan Fang; Chunyu Geng; Jianguo Zhang; Hui Jiang; Riza Köksal Özgul; Didem Yücel Yılmaz; Dilek Yalnızoğlu; Deniz Yüksel; Anna Yarrow; Angela Myers; Sabrina C Burn; Patricia L Crotwell; Sergio Padilla-Lopez; Ali Dursun; Kirill A Martemyanov; Michael C Kruer
Journal:  Neurol Genet       Date:  2016-05-12
  9 in total
  9 in total

Review 1.  Paroxysmal Movement Disorders: Recent Advances.

Authors:  Zheyu Xu; Che-Kang Lim; Louis C S Tan; Eng-King Tan
Journal:  Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep       Date:  2019-06-11       Impact factor: 5.081

2.  Child Neurology: Spastic paraparesis and dystonia with a novel ADCY5 mutation.

Authors:  Marissa Dean; Ludwine Messiaen; Gregory M Cooper; Michelle D Amaral; Salman Rashid; Bruce R Korf; David G Standaert
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2019-09-10       Impact factor: 9.910

3.  ADCY5 Related Dyskinesia-A Rare Mutation.

Authors:  Bandari Mahesh; Varun Kumar Singh; Abhishek Pathak; Anand Kumar; Rameshwar Nath Chaurasia
Journal:  Mov Disord Clin Pract       Date:  2022-02-16

Review 4.  ADCY5-Related Dyskinesia: Improving Clinical Detection of an Evolving Disorder.

Authors:  Nirosen Vijiaratnam; Kailash P Bhatia; Anthony E Lang; Wendy H Raskind; Alberto J Espay
Journal:  Mov Disord Clin Pract       Date:  2019-08-19

5.  Homozygous ADCY5 mutation causes early-onset movement disorder with severe intellectual disability.

Authors:  Nobuhiko Okamoto; Fuyuki Miya; Yukihiro Kitai; Tatsuhiko Tsunoda; Mitsuhiro Kato; Shinji Saitoh; Yonehiro Kanemura; Kenjiro Kosaki
Journal:  Neurol Sci       Date:  2021-03-11       Impact factor: 3.307

Review 6.  Clinical and Genetic Overview of Paroxysmal Movement Disorders and Episodic Ataxias.

Authors:  Giacomo Garone; Alessandro Capuano; Lorena Travaglini; Federica Graziola; Fabrizia Stregapede; Ginevra Zanni; Federico Vigevano; Enrico Bertini; Francesco Nicita
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2020-05-20       Impact factor: 5.923

7.  A Novel Homozygous ADCY5 Variant is Associated with a Neurodevelopmental Disorder and Movement Abnormalities.

Authors:  Rauan Kaiyrzhanov; Maha S Zaki; Reza Maroofian; Natalia Dominik; Aboulfazl Rad; Barbara Vona; Henry Houlden
Journal:  Mov Disord Clin Pract       Date:  2021-07-31

8.  Hyperphosphorylated Tau, Increased Adenylate Cyclase 5 (ADCY5) Immunoreactivity, but No Neuronal Loss in ADCY5-Dyskinesia.

Authors:  Dong-Hui Chen; Caitlin S Latimer; Min Spencer; Prasanthi Karna; Luis F Gonzalez-Cuyar; Marie Y Davis; C Dirk Keene; Thomas D Bird; Wendy H Raskind
Journal:  Mov Disord Clin Pract       Date:  2019-12-14

9.  Heterozygous STUB1 missense variants cause ataxia, cognitive decline, and STUB1 mislocalization.

Authors:  Dong-Hui Chen; Caitlin Latimer; Mayumi Yagi; Mesaki Kenneth Ndugga-Kabuye; Elyana Heigham; Suman Jayadev; James S Meabon; Christopher M Gomez; C Dirk Keene; David G Cook; Wendy H Raskind; Thomas D Bird
Journal:  Neurol Genet       Date:  2020-02-10
  9 in total

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