| Literature DB >> 30981218 |
Nicole J Lake1,2, Luke E Formosa3, David A Stroud4, Michael T Ryan3, Sarah E Calvo5,6,7, Vamsi K Mootha5,6,7, Bharti Morar8,9, Peter G Procopis10,11, John Christodoulou1,2,11,12, Alison G Compton1,2, David R Thorburn1,2,12.
Abstract
Leigh syndrome is a mitochondrial disease caused by pathogenic variants in over 85 genes. Whole exome sequencing of a patient with Leigh-like syndrome identified homozygous protein-truncating variants in two genes associated with Leigh syndrome; a reported pathogenic variant in PDHX (NP_003468.2:p.(Arg446*)), and an uncharacterized variant in complex I (CI) assembly factor TIMMDC1 (NP_057673.2:p.(Arg225*)). The TIMMDC1 variant was predicted to truncate 61 amino acids at the C-terminus and functional studies demonstrated a hypomorphic impact of the variant on CI assembly. However, the mutant protein could still rescue CI assembly in TIMMDC1 knockout cells and the patient's clinical phenotype was not clearly distinct from that of other patients with the same PDHX defect. Our data suggest that the hypomorphic effect of the TIMMDC1 protein-truncating variant does not constitute a dual diagnosis in this individual. We recommend cautious assessment of variants in the C-terminus of TIMMDC1 and emphasize the need to consider the caveats detailed within the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) criteria when assessing variants.Entities:
Keywords: ACMG guidelines; Leigh syndrome; TIMMDC1; complex I; protein truncation
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30981218 PMCID: PMC6661004 DOI: 10.1002/humu.23753
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878