Literature DB >> 30039206

The polynucleotide kinase 3'-phosphatase gene (PNKP) is involved in Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT2B2) previously related to MED25.

Alejandro Leal1,2,3, Sixto Bogantes-Ledezma4, Arif B Ekici5, Steffen Uebe5, Christian T Thiel5, Heinrich Sticht6, Martin Berghoff7, Corinna Berghoff8, Bernal Morera9, Michael Meisterernst10, André Reis5.   

Abstract

Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) represents a heterogeneous group of hereditary peripheral neuropathies. We previously reported a CMT locus on chromosome 19q13.3 segregating with the disease in a large Costa Rican family with axonal neuropathy and autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance (CMT2B2). We proposed a homozygous missense variant in the Mediator complex 25 (MED25) gene as causative of the disease. Nevertheless, the fact that no other CMT individuals with MED25 variants were reported to date led us to reevaluate the original family. Using exome sequencing, we now identified a homozygous nonsense variant (p.Gln517ter) in the last exon of an adjacent gene, the polynucleotide kinase 3'-phosphatase (PNKP) gene. It encodes a DNA repair protein recently associated with recessive ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 4 (AOA4) and microcephaly, seizures, and developmental delay (MCSZ). Subsequently, five unrelated Costa Rican CMT2 subjects initially identified as being heterozygous for the same MED25 variant were found to be also compound heterozygote for PNKP. All were heterozygous for the same variant found homozygous in the large family and a second one previously associated with ataxia (p.Thr408del). Detailed clinical reassessment of the initial family and the new individuals revealed in all an adult-onset slowly progressive CMT2 associated with signs of cerebellar dysfunction such as slurred speech and oculomotor involvement, but neither microcephaly, seizures, nor developmental delay. We propose that PKNP variants are the major causative variant for the CMT2 phenotype in these individuals and that the milder clinical manifestation is due to an allelic effect.

Entities:  

Keywords:  AOA4; CMT; CMT2B2; MED25; PNKP

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30039206      PMCID: PMC6280876          DOI: 10.1007/s10048-018-0555-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurogenetics        ISSN: 1364-6745            Impact factor:   2.660


Introduction

In 2001, we reported mapping of a locus for an axonal Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease with autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance to chromosome 19q13.3 (CMT2B2, MIM 605589). Affected members of a Costa Rican family (CR-P) presented with a symmetric motor and sensory neuropathy, distal muscle wasting, impaired deep tendon reflexes, and age at onset between 28 and 42 years. Electrophysiological studies revealed an axonal degenerative process (CMT2) [1]. Fine-mapping allowed refining of the critical interval to 1 Mb encompassing a total of 53 established or putative genes. An exhaustive search for the causative variant with Sanger sequencing of all exons identified a single missense variant (c.1004C>T) p.Ala335Val in the Mediator complex 25 (MED25) gene, encoding a subunit of an RNA polymerase II transcriptional regulator complex. The variant is located in a proline-rich region with high affinity for SH3 domains of the Abelson type, and we could demonstrate that it leads to a decreased binding specificity. Also, we showed that in mice and rats Med25 is coordinately expressed with Pmp22 gene, a gene involved in the Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease [2]. More recently, an individual was identified with an axonal form of CMT carrying compound heterozygous variants (p.Ala335Val and p.Pro656Thr) in MED25, although this individual also presented with additional variants in other CMT-related genes [3]. Finally, suppression of med25 in Zebrafish caused damage in the axon of peripheral neurons [3]. All these findings suggested a causative role for MED25 in CMT2. Despite this, it was remarkable that until now no additional CMT families with variants in MED25 were identified. To exclude that other variants were missed in the initial Sanger-based analysis and given that meanwhile, high-throughput sequencing became available, we decided to perform exome sequencing in several affected members of the CR-P family. This led now to the identification of homozygous nonsense variant in the last exon of an adjacent gene encoding the polynucleotide kinase 3′-phosphatase (PNKP). Although this variant was already identified in our original screen, it was nevertheless discarded as the PNKP gene annotation used at the time included an upstream stop codon causing the variant to be mapped outside the coding sequence. PKNP catalyzes the 5-prime phosphorylation of nucleic acids and also has an associated 3-prime phosphatase activity, an important function in DNA repair following ionizing radiation or oxidative damage [4]. It acts as a 5′-kinase/3′-phosphatase to create 5′-phosphate/3′-hydroxyl termini, which are a necessary prerequisite for ligation during repair [5]. Homozygous variants in this gene were previously linked to progressive cerebellar atrophy and polyneuropathy [6] and recently, to both severe ataxia with oculomotor apraxia 4 (AOA4, MIM 616267) or microcephaly with seizures and developmental delay (MCSZ, MIM 613402) [7]. Our findings imply that this DNA repair enzyme is involved in a broader phenotype, including a mild axonal peripheral polyneuropathy.

Methods

Variant detection

We used DNA samples from 41 family members of the original CMT2B2 Costa Rican family, including 18 affected persons. Individuals A4.9, A5.1, A6.2, B5.3, and C3.3 [1] were selected for exome sequencing (Fig. 1). Automated library preparation was performed with a liquid handling robot and an appropriate library prep kit (both Beckman-Coulter) and enriched for the exome using Agilent SureSelect human all exon v6. Samples were then sequenced in 2 × 125 bp paired-end runs on a HiSeq2500 system with the Illumina SBS kit v4. Subsequent mapping of reads was performed using the bwa-MEM software version 0.7.8, followed by deduplication with Picard 1.111, and local realignment using GATK 3.1.1. To identify variants from refseq-hg19, calling was performed with GATK HaplotypeCaller, GATK-UnifiedGenotyper, Platypus, freeBayes, and SNVer, respectively. Subsequent annotation was accomplished with Annovar.
Fig. 1

Pedigree of the CMT-P family and electropherograms showing the PNKP c.1549C>T variant. All members of the original family affected with CMT2B2 are homozygous for the mutant allele leading to a c-terminal nonsense mutation at codon 517

Pedigree of the CMT-P family and electropherograms showing the PNKP c.1549C>T variant. All members of the original family affected with CMT2B2 are homozygous for the mutant allele leading to a c-terminal nonsense mutation at codon 517

Filtering steps

Variant analysis considering a homozygous recessive mode of inheritance was performed using the Next Generation Sequencing Variant Analyzer (NGS-VA), an in-house developed tool. To minimize the number of false positives, we included only variants which were covered by at least 10% of the average coverage of the patient’s exome. We excluded all variants with a frequency > 0.001 in the 1000 Genomes Project, the Exome Variant Server and the Exome Aggregation Consortium server. Furthermore, we restricted our analysis to exonic variants and variants in canonical splice sites ranging from − 12 to + 5. As we considered a stronger impact of protein-altering variants, we further excluded synonymous variants from our analysis. The remaining variants were manually examined with the Integrative Genomics Viewer to exclude artifacts. Taking into account that the Costa Rican family shows consanguinity and the same haplotype is linked to the CMT locus, the NGS-VA selected only variants present in all affected members tested. The exome analysis was performed according to Hauer et al. (2017) [8].

Validation

The identified PKNP variant was validated by Sanger sequencing using flanking primers: PNKP-50364522-F (5′-ATGTCTAAAGTGCTCATGCCAGG-3′) and PNKP-50364522-R (5′-GGTACTGTTGGGGATAGCAGG-3′). DNA samples from all family members were used to confirm segregation. PCR conditions are available on request. Bidirectional direct sequencing was implemented using the BigDye Terminator Cycle Sequencing Kit (Applied Biosystems) on a 3730 capillary sequencer (Applied Biosystems). Sequence traces were evaluated using the DNAStar software package. Other five CMT2 individuals previously identified to be heterozygous for the MED25 variant p.A335V, donated DNA samples and were likewise analyzed for the p.Q517X or other PNKP and MED25 variants (primers and conditions are available on request). Also, exome sequencing was performed for one of these additionally recruited individuals (CMT1101). Informed consent was obtained from all participants included in the study. The study was approved by the institutional review board at University of Costa Rica.

Protein modeling

The structure of human PNKP was modeled based on the crystal structure of murine PNKP (PDB code: 3ZVN) [9] exhibiting 92% sequence similarity. Rasmol [10] was used for structure analysis and visualization.

Clinical analysis

All affected individuals from the original large family underwent clinical and electrophysiological evaluations [2]. Some of them are still alive, and we were able to reassess two of them (P009 and P178). Also, the five patients of the five additional families were clinically and electrophysiologically studied some years ago, but two of them could be likewise reanalyzed (CMT1003 and CMT1190). Clinical reevaluation of the four reanalyzed patients of both the large and other families was performed by a single neurologist (SB-L). Standard clinical, electrophysiological examinations were recorded by ALPINE BIOMED Keypoint Portable EMG Unit by the same physician. To evaluate if patients presented with brain alterations, four affected individuals were scanned with a 1.5-T MRI using T1-weighted and T2-weighted both axial and coronal, FLAIR, and diffusion-weighted sequences.

Results

Exome sequencing

Seventy-two homozygous variants were identified in the five exome-sequenced individuals of the original Costa Rican family with CMT2B2, but only one was shared by all five. In this way, a transition c.C1549T in exon 17 of the polynucleotide kinase 3′-phosphatase (PNKP) gene (rs774995635) was found to be homozygous for all affected members of the family (Fig. 1). This variant has a frequency of 18/245,644 (gnomAD database All) and causes a nonsense mutation (p.Gln517ter) predicted to truncate the last five amino acids. PNKP is located within the critical linkage interval on chromosome 19q13.33 previously described for this family [2]. When using more relaxed allele frequency parameters to admit variants with a general frequency < 0.005%, the variant p.Ala335Val in MED25 could also be detected. Segregation analysis of the MED25 and PNKP variants demonstrated that they fully cosegregate indicating that they are present on the same haplotype in all affected individuals. Interestingly, all the unrelated individuals heterozygous for the MED25 variant not belonging to the extended family were also heterozygous for this PNKP variant, suggesting that this is an ancestral founder haplotype. Analysis of the entire PNKP coding sequence in the five Costa Rican CMT2 patients not belonging to the extended family but also heterozygous for MED25 variant p.Ala335Val identified the same additional PKNP variant in all five of them. It consists of a three-base deletion in exon 14, c.1221_1223del, previously associated with autosomal recessive Ataxia-Oculomotor Apraxia 4 (AOA4; MIM 616267, variant .0007). This variant results in the deletion of residue Thr408 (Thr408del) (Fig. 2) and was observed in the gnomAD database (rs770849181) with a general frequency of 15/214338. Through segregation analysis, it was observed that these individuals are compound heterozygous for the PNKP variants identified (c.1221_1223del/c.C1549T). No additional MED25 variants were found in any of these individuals.
Fig. 2

Pedigrees and electropherograms of five additional Costa Rican CMT families with affected members due to compound heterozygosity for two PNKP variants, the mutated alleles c.1549C>T, found in the large initial family, and the c.1221_1223del, previously related to ataxia with oculomotor apraxia

Pedigrees and electropherograms of five additional Costa Rican CMT families with affected members due to compound heterozygosity for two PNKP variants, the mutated alleles c.1549C>T, found in the large initial family, and the c.1221_1223del, previously related to ataxia with oculomotor apraxia PNKP contains a kinase and a phosphate domain that are both involved in DNA binding. The C-terminus of the protein is buried between these two domains (Fig. 3a). Wildtype residues Q517-G521, which are lacking in the p.Gln517ter variant, form extensive interactions with residues from the phosphatase domain (C308, L312, L315) and the kinase domain (R458, R462) (Fig. 3b).
Fig. 3

Effect of the Gln517ter variant on PNKP structure. a Structure of DNA-bound wildtype PNKP. The protein is shown as ribbon and residues 517–521, which are lacking in the variant, are shown in the blue space-filled presentation. DNA, ADP, and residue Y515 as part of the ADP-pocket are shown in stick presentation. b Detailed view showing the interactions of residues 517–521 of wildtype PNKP. Polar and hydrophobic interactions are indicated by black dotted lines and cyan ellipses, respectively. c Structure of Gln517ter PNKP schematically depicting the rearrangement of the shorter COOH-terminus due to the lack of interaction with the remaining domains

Effect of the Gln517ter variant on PNKP structure. a Structure of DNA-bound wildtype PNKP. The protein is shown as ribbon and residues 517–521, which are lacking in the variant, are shown in the blue space-filled presentation. DNA, ADP, and residue Y515 as part of the ADP-pocket are shown in stick presentation. b Detailed view showing the interactions of residues 517–521 of wildtype PNKP. Polar and hydrophobic interactions are indicated by black dotted lines and cyan ellipses, respectively. c Structure of Gln517ter PNKP schematically depicting the rearrangement of the shorter COOH-terminus due to the lack of interaction with the remaining domains

Clinical investigation

All patients from the large Costa Rican family and the five additional families were clinically and electrophysiologically diagnosed with axonal peripheral polyneuropathy. On general examination (Table 1), the four reevaluated individuals presented with mild lumbar scoliosis and a claw hand, but only the youngest male (CMT1190, compound heterozygous) had pes cavus and hammertoes. The neurological examination did not show evidence of cognitive impairment, microcephaly [11], or seizures. None of them were affected by movement disorders, but all had slurred speech, most pronounced in the oldest male (CMT1003, compound heterozygous).
Table 1

Clinical signs and imaging features of CMT2B2 individuals carrying PNKP mutations

CMT1003CMT1190B4.2A6.2
GenderMaleMaleFemaleFemale
Age55265955
Decade of age at onsetThirdThirdThirdThird
First signPolyneuropathyPolyneuropathyPolyneuropathyPolyneuropathy
More prominent signPolyneuropathyPolyneuropathyPolyneuropathyPolyneuropathy
OMA++++
Slurred speech++++++
Mobility5 years in wheelchairMobile, mild gait ataxiaIntermittent mobileIntermittent mobile
Dystonia
Cognitive impairment
UE muscle strength (I/D)3/04/33/03/0
LE muscle strength (P/I/D)4/0/05/3/05/0/05/0/0
Reflexes (UE/knee/ankle)1/0/02/0/01/0/01/0/0
UE sensory involvement (T/Pa/V/Po)2/1/0/02/1/0/02/1/0/02/1/0/0
LE sensory involvement (T/Pa/V/Po)0/0/0/01/0/0/00/0/0/00/0/0/0
AtrophyIntrinsic muscles of hands and feet, calvesIntrinsic muscles of hands and feet, calvesIntrinsic muscles of hands and feet, calvesIntrinsic muscles of hands and feet, lymphedema
DeformitiesClaw handClaw hand, pes cavus and hammertoesClaw handClaw hand
Pyramidal signs
Obesity+
MRI findingsCA, no WM abnormalitiesCA, no WM abnormalitiesCA, no WM abnormalitiesCA, no WM abnormalities
Head circumference (centile against height and gender) (21)55.8 cm (25th)58.3 cm (75th)53 cm (50th)52.5 cm (25th)

OMA oculomotor apraxia, UE upper extremity, LE lower extremity, P proximal (knee extensor or flexor), I intermediate (hand extensor or flexor (UE), foot extensor or flexor (LE), D distal (intrinsic hand muscles (UE), intrinsic foot muscles (LE)). Motor scale: 5 normal; 4 mild weakness; 3 ability to lift against gravity; 2 not able to lift against gravity, but movement visible; 1 no movement, but tendon contraction visible; 0 complete paralysis. Reflexes/sense of vibration or position: 2 normal, 1 reduced, 0 absent, T touch, Pa pain, V vibration, Po position. Sensory involvement: 2 normal; 1 mildly reduced, distally to wrist level (UE) or malleoli level (LE); 0 severely reduced, distally to elbow level (UE) or knee level (LE). CA cerebellar atrophy. WM white matter

Clinical signs and imaging features of CMT2B2 individuals carrying PNKP mutations OMA oculomotor apraxia, UE upper extremity, LE lower extremity, P proximal (knee extensor or flexor), I intermediate (hand extensor or flexor (UE), foot extensor or flexor (LE), D distal (intrinsic hand muscles (UE), intrinsic foot muscles (LE)). Motor scale: 5 normal; 4 mild weakness; 3 ability to lift against gravity; 2 not able to lift against gravity, but movement visible; 1 no movement, but tendon contraction visible; 0 complete paralysis. Reflexes/sense of vibration or position: 2 normal, 1 reduced, 0 absent, T touch, Pa pain, V vibration, Po position. Sensory involvement: 2 normal; 1 mildly reduced, distally to wrist level (UE) or malleoli level (LE); 0 severely reduced, distally to elbow level (UE) or knee level (LE). CA cerebellar atrophy. WM white matter The ocular movement exploration revealed that the oldest male was affected by a complete inability to start voluntary eye movements, either in the vertical or horizontal planes. However, he exhibited vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) and was able to keep the gaze fixed at a point while performing passive movements of the head. The youngest male (CMT1190) presented with slow saccades and difficulty in initiating voluntary changes in gaze with preserved VOR. Among the affected females (A6.2 and B4.2) homozygous for the p.Gln517ter variant in PNKP, only the older one had mild difficulty in initiating saccades but without oculomotor apraxia, while the younger presented with no apparent ocular movement problems. The motor strength in the proximal upper limbs was entirely preserved, but palmar grip strength was moderately reduced. In the older patients, proximal lower limb strength was moderately reduced, but in the youngest individual (CMT1190) it was completely preserved. Distally, they all were weak in all limbs, muscle atrophy of the calves and the intrinsic muscles of the hand and foot was observed; the first muscle group could not be assessed in the youngest woman (A6.2) because she presented with lymphedema. Sensory examination demonstrated marked decrease of vibration and position sensations in either upper or lower extremities of all patients; touch and pain sensations were preserved only in the upper extremities. Deep-tendon reflexes were absent in the lower extremities. The youngest male (CMT1190) had a normal finger to nose test, both females (A6.2 and B4.2) showed severe slowness of motor execution in the finger to nose test, and the older man (CMT1003) was unable to perform the test. The youngest male was able to walk without support but had a wide-based gait. The oldest woman could walk short distances with a four-point walking device. Finally, the oldest male was wheelchair-bound for 5 years and was dependent for daily living activities. Electrophysiological studies (Table 2) showed a severe axonal sensory-motor polyneuropathy of the four limbs. In the three patients who maintain mobility, the electrophysiological analysis demonstrated a severe reduction of the CMAP of affected nerves with relative preservation of F-waves latency and secondary slowing of the MNCV in the elder individuals. Meanwhile, in the wheelchair-bound individual, the CMAP could not be measured. MRI of the brain revealed cerebellar atrophy with no white matter abnormalities, brain atrophy, nor brainstem atrophy, in all studied individuals (Figs. 4, 5, and 6). Laboratory findings (Table 3) showed albumin levels practically normal, with mild elevation of cholesterol levels in two of them, and elevation between 1.1 and 1.5 times of the alpha-fetoprotein in all but the youngest patient. Just two patients had a mild elevation of IgE levels.
Table 2

Electrophysiological data of patients carrying PNKP mutations

PatientNerveMotor NCSSensory NCS
DML (ms) right/leftMNCV (m/s) right/leftF-wave latencies (ms) right/leftDistal CMAP (mV) right/leftSNCV (m/s) right/leftSNAP (uV) right/left
CMT1003Median−/−−/−−/−−/−−/−−/−
Ulnar−/−−/−−/−−/−−/−−/−
Tibial−/−−/−−/−−/−
Peroneal−/−−/−−/−−/−
CMT1190Median4.1/4.444.6/38.028.3/31.211.9/4.7−/−−/−
Ulnar3.4/4.239.5/40.222.0/21.94.0/3.8−/−−/−
Tibial−/−−/−−/−−/−
Peroneal0.0/−−/−−/−0.0/−
B4.2Median9.8/−17.8/−−/21.00.0/−−/−−/−
Ulnar7.7/−−/−−/20.80.0/−−/−−/−
Tibial−/−−/−−/−−/−
Peroneal−/−−/−−/−−/−
A6.2Median6.1/3.931.5/41. 554.6/30.90.1/7.7−/−−/−
Ulnar4.2/4.135.0/39.353.5/50.40.2/0.8−/−−/−
Tibial−/−−/−−/−−/−
Peroneal−/−−/−−/−−/−
Fig. 4

Midsagittal T1-weighted brain MRI of four CMT2B2 individuals showing mild cerebellar atrophy. a CMT1003. b CMT1190. c B4.2 (C). d A6.2

Fig. 5

Axial T2-weighted brain MRI of the four individuals showing mild cerebellar atrophy. a CMT1003. b CMT1190. c B4.2. d A6.2

Fig. 6

Axial T2-weighted brain MRI of the four individuals at a ganglionar level shows no brain structures lesions. a CMT1003. b CMT1190. c B4.2. d A6.2

Table 3

Laboratory findings of patients carrying PNKP mutations

ParameterCMT1003CMT1190B4.2A6.2Reference
Albumin2.133.243.453.513.5–4.8 g/dL
Cholesterol144274244159< 200 mg/dL
HDL36.5403652.5> 35 mg/dL
LDL64.718613585.6< 130 mg/dL
Triglyceride11221740759.630–150 mg/dL
IgE80.2170.343.7155< 100 UI/mL
Alfa-fetoprotein7.362.266.248.540.5–5.5 UI/mL
Electrophysiological data of patients carrying PNKP mutations Midsagittal T1-weighted brain MRI of four CMT2B2 individuals showing mild cerebellar atrophy. a CMT1003. b CMT1190. c B4.2 (C). d A6.2 Axial T2-weighted brain MRI of the four individuals showing mild cerebellar atrophy. a CMT1003. b CMT1190. c B4.2. d A6.2 Axial T2-weighted brain MRI of the four individuals at a ganglionar level shows no brain structures lesions. a CMT1003. b CMT1190. c B4.2. d A6.2 Laboratory findings of patients carrying PNKP mutations

Discussion

We provide evidence that a variant in the polynucleotide kinase 3′-phosphatase (PNKP) gene is responsible for the CMT2B2 in a large Costa Rican family (CR-P), previously associated with a variant in the subunit 25 of the Mediator complex (MED25) gene. Although all affected members of this family are homozygous both for the p.Ala335Val variant in MED25 and p.Gln517del in PNKP, we have identified five additional individuals from other Costa Rican CMT2 families, who are heterozygous for the MED25 variant (without additional MED25 variants) but compound heterozygous for two PNKP variants (p.Gln517ter/p.Thr408del). This indicates that variants on PNKP are the principal cause of the disease. PNKP is located in the original linkage interval and it was tested in our patients. Nevertheless, the c. C1549T variant was initially not considered, as the annotation of that gene was incomplete when we performed the first Sanger sequencing analysis in 2001. The variant is located in what is now recognized at PNKP’s last exon. The PNKP variant p.Gln517ter is a rare variant with a frequency of 18/245,644 (gnomAD All), in agreement with what is expected for a deleterious mutation. Aminoacids at positions 517–521 of PNKP are very well evolutionary conserved in diverse species (Fig. 7) suggesting that C-terminal tail is critical for its function. The Gln517ter variant, homozygous for the affected individuals of the large family, causes the loss of those amino acids of the enzyme, that play a role in the stabilization of the protein, anchoring the kinase domain to the phosphatase domain [12]. Another mutation in PNKP at the same position (Gln517Leufs*24) has been shown to cause ataxia (including polyneuropathy) [12]. Protein modeling of PNKP with and without the Gln517ter mutation shows that this mutation is predicted to be pathogenic since the fixation of the C-terminus appears essential for stabilizing the relative domain orientation and for stabilizing the conformation of the ADP-binding site, which involves Y515 close to the site of truncation. Due to the lack of the stabilizing interactions with the other domains, the shorter carboxy-terminus of the variant is predicted to become flexible (Fig. 3c) thus leading to a distorted ADP-binding site and consequently a reduced enzymatic activity. This result in that damaged DNA, mainly by oxidative stress at the nervous system, cannot be repaired efficiently, with a subsequent transcription interference and ultimately cell death [13]. In the present study, we investigated the eldest individuals carrying mutations in PNKP to date. Contrary to what is described for AOA4 [12, 14–17], the four reassessed individuals developed normally until the beginning of the third decade of life when gait disturbances and falls began. The disease in our patients progresses slowly, requiring a wheelchair near the sixth decade. Proximal muscle strength is preserved even in patients with the most advanced disease, and deterioration in gait was associated with postural instability rather than weakness. Cerebellar involvement occurs in all individuals, including the youngest with slurred speech-language and a wide-based gait. The two reanalyzed compound heterozygous individuals presented with oculomotor apraxia, more severe in the oldest (CMT1003) than in the youngest (CMT1190). This sign was not present in the reexamined homozygous individuals. In fact, the only finding on them related to ocular motility is the presence of slow saccadic movements in the older woman (B4.2). However, a 57-year-old male (B4.1) sibling of female B4.2 also homozygous for the p.Gln517del variant, presented with severe oculomotor apraxia and is currently wheelchair-bound. Oculomotor apraxia was not observed in the CMT2B2 individuals investigated 20 years ago.
Fig. 7

Homology analysis of the PNKP protein with the Gln517ter mutation highlighted with a green box. The last five amino acids of the enzyme (QFSEG) are highly evolutionary conserved in mammals

Homology analysis of the PNKP protein with the Gln517ter mutation highlighted with a green box. The last five amino acids of the enzyme (QFSEG) are highly evolutionary conserved in mammals Laboratory findings showed a small coincidence in the pattern of the biological parameters as described in other individuals that carry PNKP mutations [12, 15–17]. Only patient CMT1190 presents hypoalbuminemia, hypercholesterolemia, and elevated IgE with normal alpha-fetoprotein as described in other patients (Table 4). The pattern of elevation or decrease of these biological parameters was not consistent in the other patients described in this study. Besides, there is no relationship between the severity of the phenotype and the levels of alpha-fetoprotein, IgE and albumin, contrary to what it has been reported in other patients with AOA4 [16, 17]. Curiously, our female patient that presents lower limb lymphedema, has no albumin alteration as described previously in a Norwegian female patient, undermining the theory that lymphedema was secondary to hypoalbuminemia [15].
Table 4

Comparison of laboratory findings of our patients with literature descriptions

ParameterCMT1003CMT1190B4.2A6.2Bras et al.Paucar et al.Schiess et al.Tzoulis et al.
AlbuminLowLowNormalNormalLowLowLowLow
CholesterolNormalElevatedElevatedNormalElevatedElevatedElevatedElevated
IgENormalElevatedNormalElevatedNot availableNot availableElevatedNot available
Alpha-fetoproteinElevatedNormalElevatedElevatedNormalElevatedNormalNormal
Comparison of laboratory findings of our patients with literature descriptions The occurrence of individuals homozygous or compound heterozygous for PNKP variants which are either homozygous or heterozygous for the MED25 variant indicates that the MED25 variant is a hitchhiker variant in linkage disequilibrium on the same haplotype with the PNKP variant p.Gln517del. Despite its relatively high population frequency (1067/274,696; gnomAD All), no additional CMT2 patients have been identified with variants in MED25. Only three patients were recently reported, but these patients had additional variants in other CMT-related genes, which could well explain their phenotype [3]. In our previous study, we demonstrated that in rats Med25 expression correlated with Pmp22 dosage and expression, which is interesting because Pmp22 is a gene involved in demyelinating peripheral neuropathies. We proposed that both Med25 and Pmp22 expression are regulated by neuron-Schwann cell interactions. In addition, we demonstrated that the p.Ala335Val variant in the mediator of transcription MED25 increases the activation of the target genes in the peripheral nervous system [2]. Considering this, and that both the p.Ala335Val mutation in MED25 and a mutation in codon 517 of PNKP have shown to modify the codified protein’s function [2, 12], and the late age of onset and mild affectation of the CR-P patients, it would be possible to hypothesize that the MED25 variant confers a protective effect in them. In order to test this, patients that only present the PKNP variant would be useful to compare them clinically with patients of the CR-P family. The involvement of PNKP in neurodegenerative disorders was already reported by Poulton et al. (2013) who presented two cases affected with a progressive polyneuropathy with early onset, severe progressive cerebellar atrophy, microcephaly, mild epilepsy, and intellectual disability. A homozygous variant (c.1250_1266dup, p.Thr424GlyfsX48) in PNKP was identified in these cases [6]. This gene, mainly related so far with AOA4 and MCSZ, has also been found through exome analysis in an individual initially diagnosed with an axonal form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease. This individual was homozygous for the variant p.Thr408del, also identified in our study [14]. Therefore, this study confirms the role of PNKP mutations in peripheral polyneuropathies and add data associated to the variability of the PNKP-related phenotype, due to the late age of onset of the neuropathy in our PNPK mutated patients. In conclusion, we provide evidence that PNKP is the main gene related to CMT2B2 instead of MED25, and that it should be considered as a gene involved in an axonal peripheral neuropathy with late age onset, cerebellar atrophy, and with or without oculomotor apraxia.
  17 in total

1.  A second locus for an axonal form of autosomal recessive Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease maps to chromosome 19q13.3.

Authors:  A Leal; B Morera; D Heuss; C Kayser; M Berghoff; R Villegas; E Hernández; M Méndez; H C Hennies; B Neundörfer; R Barrantes; A Reis; B Rautenstrauss
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2000-12-07       Impact factor: 11.025

2.  Centiles for adult head circumference.

Authors:  K M Bushby; T Cole; J N Matthews; J A Goodship
Journal:  Arch Dis Child       Date:  1992-10       Impact factor: 3.791

3.  Novel PNKP mutation in siblings with ataxia-oculomotor apraxia type 4.

Authors:  Nicoline Schiess; David S Zee; Khurram A Siddiqui; Miklos Szolics; Ayman W El-Hattab
Journal:  J Neurogenet       Date:  2017 Mar - Jun       Impact factor: 1.250

4.  The molecular architecture of the mammalian DNA repair enzyme, polynucleotide kinase.

Authors:  Nina K Bernstein; R Scott Williams; Melissa L Rakovszky; Diana Cui; Ruth Green; Feridoun Karimi-Busheri; Rajam S Mani; Sarah Galicia; C Anne Koch; Carol E Cass; Daniel Durocher; Michael Weinfeld; J N Mark Glover
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2005-03-04       Impact factor: 17.970

5.  Progressive cerebellar atrophy and polyneuropathy: expanding the spectrum of PNKP mutations.

Authors:  Cathryn Poulton; Renske Oegema; Daphne Heijsman; Jeannette Hoogeboom; Rachel Schot; Hans Stroink; Michèl A Willemsen; Frans W Verheijen; Peter van de Spek; Andreas Kremer; Grazia M S Mancini
Journal:  Neurogenetics       Date:  2012-12-09       Impact factor: 2.660

Review 6.  Polynucleotide kinase-phosphatase (PNKP) mutations and neurologic disease.

Authors:  Lavinia C Dumitrache; Peter J McKinnon
Journal:  Mech Ageing Dev       Date:  2016-04-26       Impact factor: 5.432

7.  The structural basis for substrate recognition by mammalian polynucleotide kinase 3' phosphatase.

Authors:  Fernando Garces; Laurence H Pearl; Antony W Oliver
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2011-11-04       Impact factor: 17.970

8.  PNKP Mutations Identified by Whole-Exome Sequencing in a Norwegian Patient with Sporadic Ataxia and Edema.

Authors:  C Tzoulis; Paweł Sztromwasser; Stefan Johansson; Ivar Otto Gjerde; Per Knappskog; L A Bindoff
Journal:  Cerebellum       Date:  2017-02       Impact factor: 3.847

9.  Mutations in PNKP cause recessive ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 4.

Authors:  Jose Bras; Isabel Alonso; Clara Barbot; Maria Manuela Costa; Lee Darwent; Tatiana Orme; Jorge Sequeiros; John Hardy; Paula Coutinho; Rita Guerreiro
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2015-02-26       Impact factor: 11.025

10.  Clinical relevance of systematic phenotyping and exome sequencing in patients with short stature.

Authors:  Nadine N Hauer; Bernt Popp; Eva Schoeller; Sarah Schuhmann; Karen E Heath; Alfonso Hisado-Oliva; Patricia Klinger; Cornelia Kraus; Udo Trautmann; Martin Zenker; Christiane Zweier; Antje Wiesener; Rami Abou Jamra; Erdmute Kunstmann; Dagmar Wieczorek; Steffen Uebe; Fulvia Ferrazzi; Christian Büttner; Arif B Ekici; Anita Rauch; Heinrich Sticht; Helmuth-Günther Dörr; André Reis; Christian T Thiel
Journal:  Genet Med       Date:  2017-10-12       Impact factor: 8.822

View more
  8 in total

1.  Ataxia with Oculomotor Apraxia Type 4 with PNKP Common "Portuguese" and Novel Mutations in Two Belarusian Families.

Authors:  Galina E Rudenskaya; Andrey V Marakhonov; Olga A Shchagina; Ekaterina R Lozier; Elena L Dadali; Irina A Akimova; Nika V Petrova; Fedor A Konovalov
Journal:  J Pediatr Genet       Date:  2019-03-27

2.  Improving the phenotype description of Basel-Vanagaite-Smirin-Yosef syndrome, MED25-related: polymicrogyria as a distinctive neuroradiological finding.

Authors:  Ilenia Maini; Edoardo Errichiello; Stefano Giuseppe Caraffi; Orsetta Zuffardi; Livia Garavelli; Simonetta Rosato; Veronica Bizzarri; Marzia Pollazzon; Gabriele Trimarchi; Gianluca Contrò; Benedetta Cavirani; Chiara Gelmini; Manuela Napoli; Claudio Moratti; Rosario Pascarella; Susanna Rizzi; Carlo Fusco
Journal:  Neurogenetics       Date:  2020-08-20       Impact factor: 2.660

Review 3.  Next-generation sequencing in Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease: opportunities and challenges.

Authors:  Menelaos Pipis; Alexander M Rossor; Matilde Laura; Mary M Reilly
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurol       Date:  2019-10-03       Impact factor: 42.937

Review 4.  Mitochondrial support and local translation of mitochondrial proteins in synaptic plasticity and function.

Authors:  YongTian Liang
Journal:  Histol Histopathol       Date:  2021-05-25       Impact factor: 2.303

5.  Novel PNKP mutations causing defective DNA strand break repair and PARP1 hyperactivity in MCSZ.

Authors:  Ilona Kalasova; Hana Hanzlikova; Neerja Gupta; Yun Li; Janine Altmüller; John J Reynolds; Grant S Stewart; Bernd Wollnik; Gökhan Yigit; Keith W Caldecott
Journal:  Neurol Genet       Date:  2019-03-25

6.  Mutations of the DNA repair gene PNKP in a patient with microcephaly, seizures, and developmental delay (MCSZ) presenting with a high-grade brain tumor.

Authors:  Bingcheng Jiang; Cameron Murray; Bonnie L Cole; J N Mark Glover; Gordon K Chan; Jean Deschenes; Rajam S Mani; Sudip Subedi; John D Nerva; Anthony C Wang; Christina M Lockwood; Heather C Mefford; Sarah E S Leary; Jeffery G Ojemann; Michael Weinfeld; Chibawanye I Ene
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-03-30       Impact factor: 4.379

7.  A de novo heterozygous variant in the SON gene is associated with Zhu-Tokita-Takenouchi-Kim syndrome.

Authors:  Lianlian Yang; Fan Yang
Journal:  Mol Genet Genomic Med       Date:  2020-09-14       Impact factor: 2.183

8.  PNKP is required for maintaining the integrity of progenitor cell populations in adult mice.

Authors:  Wisoo Shin; Whitney Alpaugh; Laura J Hallihan; Sarthak Sinha; Emilie Crowther; Gary R Martin; Teresa Scheidl-Yee; Xiaoyan Yang; Grace Yoon; Taylor Goldsmith; Nelson D Berger; Luiz Gn de Almeida; Antoine Dufour; Ina Dobrinski; Michael Weinfeld; Frank R Jirik; Jeff Biernaskie
Journal:  Life Sci Alliance       Date:  2021-07-05
  8 in total

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