| Literature DB >> 30929741 |
Mohammad Ali Farazi Fard1, Adriana P Rebelo2, Elena Buglo2, Hamid Nemati3, Hassan Dastsooz4, Ina Gehweiler5, Selina Reich5, Jennifer Reichbauer5, Beatriz Quintáns6, Andrés Ordóñez-Ugalde6, Andrea Cortese2, Steve Courel2, Lisa Abreu2, Eric Powell7, Matt C Danzi2, Nicole B Martuscelli8, Dana M Bis-Brewer2, Feifei Tao2, Fariba Zarei3, Parham Habibzadeh9, Majid Yavarian1, Farzaneh Modarresi10, Mohammad Silawi1, Zahra Tabatabaei1, Masoume Yousefi1, Hamid Reza Farpour3, Christoph Kessler5, Elisabeth Mangold11, Xenia Kobeleva12, Ivailo Tournev13, Teodora Chamova14, Amelie J Mueller15, Tobias B Haack15, Mark Tarnopolsky16, Ziv Gan-Or17, Guy A Rouleau17, Matthis Synofzik5, María-Jesús Sobrido6, Albena Jordanova18, Rebecca Schüle5, Stephan Zuchner2, Mohammad Ali Faghihi19.
Abstract
The diagnostic gap for rare neurodegenerative diseases is still considerable, despite continuous advances in gene identification. Many novel Mendelian genes have only been identified in a few families worldwide. Here we report the identification of an autosomal-dominant gene for hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) in 10 families that are of diverse geographic origin and whose affected members all carry unique truncating changes in a circumscript region of UBAP1 (ubiquitin-associated protein 1). HSP is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressive lower-limb spasticity and weakness, as well as frequent bladder dysfunction. At least 40% of affected persons are currently undiagnosed after exome sequencing. We identified pathological truncating variants in UBAP1 in affected persons from Iran, USA, Germany, Canada, Spain, and Bulgarian Roma. The genetic support ranges from linkage in the largest family (LOD = 8.3) to three confirmed de novo mutations. We show that mRNA in the fibroblasts of affected individuals escapes nonsense-mediated decay and thus leads to the expression of truncated proteins; in addition, concentrations of the full-length protein are reduced in comparison to those in controls. This suggests either a dominant-negative effect or haploinsufficiency. UBAP1 links endosomal trafficking to the ubiquitination machinery pathways that have been previously implicated in HSPs, and UBAP1 provides a bridge toward a more unified pathophysiology.Entities:
Keywords: animal model; endosomal trafficking; genetic diseases; hereditary spastic paraplegia; neurodegenerative diseases; spasticity; ubiquitination; zebrafish
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30929741 PMCID: PMC6451742 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.03.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025