| Literature DB >> 30200536 |
Eva Bagyinszky1, Hye-Mi Lee2, Vo Van Giau3, Seong-Beom Koh4, Jee Hyang Jeong5, Seong Soo A An6, SangYun Kim7.
Abstract
An in depth study of PSEN1 mutation p.Thr116Ile (c.335C>T) is presented from two Korean families with autosomal dominant inheritance. Clinical manifestation of our patients included memory loss, attention deficits, visuospatial dysfunction, agnosia, aphasia, apraxia, and personality changes, which occurred in their 30s. PSEN1 Thr116Ile was initially discovered in an Italian patient and two French families with early onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) with similar age of onset. To verify the possible pathogenic mechanisms of mutation, in silico predictions and 3D modeling were performed. Structure predictions revealed significant aberrations in first hydrophilic loop (HL-I loop). The hydrophobic isoleucine could alter the loop orientation through increased hydrophobic contacts with the surrounding amino acids. Mutation could destroy a possible hydrogen bond between tyrosine 115 and threonine 116, which may affect the loop conformation. HL-I was confirmed as a conservative region of PSEN1, which may be critical in PSEN1 functions. An additional pathogenic mutation, PSEN1 Thr116Asn, was also found for the same residue, where the patient presented young onset AD (YOND). Other mutations in HL-I loop, such as Tyr115His and Glu120Asp, were described in patients with YOND, supporting the critical role of HL-I loop in PSEN1 activity.Entities:
Keywords: PSEN1 Thr116Ile mutation; familial; mutation; presenilin-1; young onset Alzheimer’s dementia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30200536 PMCID: PMC6164060 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19092604
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1(a) Sequencing data of proband patient from Family 1 with PSEN1 T116I; (b) sequencing data of proband patient from Family 1 with PSEN1 T116I; and (c) SSCP data on PSEN1 T116I in Family 1. Number 2** is the proband patient and Number 4* is her affected sister. Numbers 1 and 3 are the asymptomatic and unaffected sisters. The ”C” means the control band, a PCR product of an individual, who was verified as wild type for PSEN1 exon 5. Star means that these individuals are affected with mutation.
Figure 2ExPASY prediction on PSEN T116I: (a) Kyte and Dootile hydrophobicity scores; (b) bulkiness scores; and (c) polarity scores.
Figure 33D modeling on PSEN1 Thr116Ile mutation, compared to the normal PSEN1. Threonine is labeled with blue while Isoleucine is labeled with yellow. Mutation could disturb significantly the HL-I loop structure.
Figure 43D model on PSEN1 Thr116Ile mutation, in terms intramolecular interactions. (a) Thr116 (blue) could form hydrogen bond with Tyr115 (orange) and may form hydrophobic interactions with Pro117 (green). (b) In the case of Ile116 (yellow), both contacts could be lost, and an additional hydrophobic interaction would be formed with Ile114 (purple).
Comparison of EOAD cases, associated with PSEN1 T116I mutation.
| Case | First Case | Second Case | Third Case | Korean-1 | Korean-2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Italy | France | France | Korea | Korea |
|
| 45 years | 40–47 years | 38–44 years | 41 years | 38 years |
|
| EOAD | EOAD | EOAD | EOAD | EOAD |
|
| Atrophy and fronto-parieto-temporal enlargement of cortical sulci | NA | NA | MRI: atrophy in the right temporal and parietal regions | MRI: Atrophy in the medial region |
|
| 14/30 | NA | NA | Initially 24/30, later 18/30 | 23/30 |
|
| Memory loss, confusion and disorientation, followed by progressive memory loss | No detailed information, but patients fulfilled the NINCDS-ADRDA criteria | No detailed information | Memory impairment, confusion, visuospatial dysfunction, speech disturbances. | Impairment in memory and mood, marked ideomotor apraxia |
|
| Unknown | Familial | Probable familial | Familial | Familial |
|
| [ | [ | [ | Our data | Our data [ |
Comparison of PSEN1 Thr116Ile with Thr116Asn.
| Mutation | Thr116Asn | Thr116Ile |
|---|---|---|
|
| Pathogenic | Pathogenic |
|
| 35–41 years | 40–47 years |
|
| EOAD | EOAD |
|
| 1.00 | 1.00 |
|
| 0 (damaging) | 0.07 (tolerated) |
|
| [ | [ |
Mutations, located in PSEN1 HL-I.
| Mutation | Dx | Clinical Symptoms/Pathology | Age of Onset | Family History | Functional Studies | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phe105Cys | AD | Memory impairment and behavioral changes | 45–60 years | Positive | NA | [ |
| Phe105Ile | AD | NA | 53–58 years | Positive | NA | [ |
| Ple105Leu | AD | Parkinson’s like symptoms, severe dementia | 52 years | Probable positive | NA | [ |
| Arg108Gln | AD | Progressive cognitive decline, myoclonic jerks | 45 years | Segregation could not proven | NA | [ |
| L113_I114insT | AD | Postmortem studies confirmed the AD | 34–45 years | Familial | 3.4-fold higher Aβ42 levels | [ |
| Leu113Pro | FTD | Behavioral impairments, myoclonic jerks, seizures | 38–50 years | Familial | NA | [ |
| Leu113Gln | AD | Rapid progressive dementia, drop attacks, myoclonic seizures, and bilateral spasticity. | 33–36 years | Familial | NA | [ |
| Tyr115Cys | AD | Postmortem studies confirmed the AD | 39–45 years | Familial | 5.4-fold higher Aβ42 levels | [ |
| Tyr115His | AD | Epileptic seizure, myoclonus | 35–40 years | Familial | Increased levels of Aβ42, lower Aβ40 | [ |
| Thr116Ile | Was discussed in details in | |||||
| Thr116Asn | ||||||
| Pro117Ala | AD | Issues with balance, tremor, ataxia | 29–35 years | Familial | Elevated Aβ42/40 ratio | [ |
| Pro117Leu | AD | Progressive memory impairment, mood swings, seizure, myoclonus | 24–33 years | Familial/de novo | Elevated Aβ42, inhibited neural overgrowth | [ |
| Pro117Arg | AD | Apathy, behavioral changes, seizures, myoclonus, gait impairment | 33–36 years | Unknown/ familial | Elevated total Aβ | [ |
| Pro117Ser | AD | Personality changes, severe dementia, seizures, myoclonus, tremor | 29–33 years | Familial | Elevated Aβ42 levels | [ |
| Glu120Asp | AD | Language impairment, seizures, disorientation | 34–53 years | Familial | NA | [ |
| Glu120Gly | AD | Memory and cognitive decline, seizure, gait disturbances | 30–39 years | Familial | NA | [ |
| Glu120Lys | AD | Spastic paraparesis | 43–45 years | Familial/ unknown | Elevated Aβ42/40 ratio | [ |
| Glu123Lys | AD | Progressive aphasia, reduced visuospatial activity | 56–62 years | Familial | NA | [ |
Figure 5Mutations, located in the HL-I of PSEN1 protein.
Figure 6(a) Family tree of patient with PSEN1 T116I mutation (Family 1); and (b) family tree of patient with PSEN1 T116I mutation (Family 2). This figure was adapted and reprinted with the permission from Dove Medical Press (Clinical Interventions in Aging) [11]. White circles mean asymptomatic patients, which were not diagnosed with disease. Family members which were crossed out, already died. Arrows show the proband patient. Question mark at the grandparents means that their disease status is unclear.
Figure 7(a) MRI data of proband patient of Family 1. Atrophy could be seen in the right temporal and parietal regions. A vascular abnormality also appeared in the left frontal area. (b) MRI data of proband patient of Family 2. (c) PET data from Family 2.