| Literature DB >> 31682085 |
Marcel Naumann1,2,3, Kevin Peikert1,3, Rene Günther1,2, Anneke J van der Kooi4, Eleonora Aronica5, Annemarie Hübers6, Veronique Danel7, Philippe Corcia7, Francisco Pan-Montojo8, Sebahattin Cirak9,10, Göknur Haliloglu11, Albert C Ludolph6, Anand Goswami12, Peter M Andersen13, Johannes Prudlo3,14,15, Florian Wegner16, Philip Van Damme17,18, Jochen H Weishaupt6, Andreas Hermann1,2,3,14,19.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Mutations in Fused in Sarcoma (FUS or TLS) are the fourth most prevalent in Western European familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) populations and have been associated with causing both early and very late disease onset. FUS aggregation, DNA repair deficiency, and genomic instability are contributors to the pathophysiology of FUS-ALS, but their clinical significance per se and their influence on the clinical variability have yet to be sufficiently investigated. The aim of this study was to analyze genotype-phenotype correlations and malignancy rates in a newly compiled FUS-ALS cohort.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31682085 PMCID: PMC6917314 DOI: 10.1002/acn3.50930
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Clin Transl Neurol ISSN: 2328-9503 Impact factor: 4.511
Demographic data of newly reported FUS‐ALS cases (=cohort 1).
| Sex | AoO (y) | Age at death (y) | Site of onset | Family history | Amino acid change | Tumor | Tumor in Autopsy | Onset to death (m) | OTSE (m) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| female | 22 | alive | arms | positive | P525L | none reported | not applicable | not applicable | 7 |
| female | 58 | 58 | arms | positive | R521L | none reported | NA | 7 | 7 |
| female | 24 | 26 | bulbar | negative | Y526C | none reported | NA | 22 | 9 |
| female | NA | 16 | NA | negative | R495* | none reported | negative | 10 | 10 |
| female | 33 | 35 | dropped head | NA | Y526C | cystic tumor intraspinal | positive | 16 | 16 |
| female | 39 | 40 | right leg | positive | R521C | several benign tumors | positive | 19 | 19 |
| female | 38 | 40 | legs | NA | R521C | Focal nodular hyperplasia liver | positive | 25 | 25 |
| female | 38 | 41 | legs (right) | positive | R521H1 | none reported | NA | 31 | 31 |
| female | 46 | 49 | arms | positive | R521H | none reported | NA | 37 | 37 |
| female4 | 60 | 63 | arms (left) | positive | R521H2 | none reported | NA | 37 | 37 |
| female | 44 | 47 | arms (left) | positive | R521H2 | none reported | NA | 38 | 38 |
| female | 61 | 66 | arms | positive | R521C | none reported | NA | 60 | 60 |
| female4 | 33 | 39 | legs (left) | positive | R521H2 | none reported | NA | 71 | 71 |
| female | NA | NA | NA | NA | R521H | none reported | NA | NA | NA |
| female | NA | NA | NA | NA | R521H | none reported | NA | NA | NA |
| female | NA | NA | NA | NA | R521H | none reported | NA | NA | NA |
| female | NA | 70 | NA | NA | R521C | none reported | NA | NA | NA |
| female | NA | 70 | NA | NA | R521C | several benign tumors | positive | NA | NA |
| female | 17 | 18 | bulbar | negative | P525L | none reported | NA | 24 | 24 |
| male | 17 | 18 | legs | negative | P525L | none reported | NA | 15 | 15 |
| male | 31 | 32 | bulbar | positive | R495Qfs*527 | Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) | NA | 18 | 18 |
| male | 23 | 25 | Legs right | positive | G478Lfs*23 | none reported | not applicable | 19 | 19 |
| male | 39 | 40 | right arm | positive | R521C | none reported | negative | 20 | 20 |
| male | 39 | 41 | bulbar | NA | R521C | none reported | negative | 20 | 20 |
| male | 54 | 56 | left (arm) | positive | R521C | none reported | negative | 27 | 27 |
| male | 71 | 74 | arms (left) | positive | R521H1 | none reported | NA | 29 | 29 |
| male | 62 | 65 | legs (left) | positive | R521C | none reported | NA | 48 | 48 |
| male | 43 | alive | arms (right) | positive | R521H | none reported | not applicable | not applicable | 61 |
| male | 63 | alive | NA | positive | M254I | none reported | NA | NA | 72 |
| male4 | 65 | 73 | arms | positive | R521H2 | none reported | NA | 86 | 86 |
| male | 35 | 49 | right hand | negative | Q23L | none reported | negative | 175 | 175 |
| male | NA | NA | NA | NA | R521H | none reported | NA | NA | NA |
| male | NA | 40 | NA | NA | R521C | none reported | NA | NA | NA |
| male | 27 | 28 | arms/ shoulders | positive | R521C3 | none reported | NA | 13 | 13 |
| male | 40 | 41 | arms (left) | positive | R521C3 | none reported | NA | 13 | 13 |
| male | 59 | alive | legs (left) | positive | K510R | none reported | not applicable | not applicable | not applicable |
| male | 40 | alive | legs (right) | NA | R521H | none reported | not applicable | not applicable | not applicable |
| male | 41 | alive | legs | positive | G509D | none reported | not applicable | not applicable | not applicable |
| male | 13 | alive | arms | NA | Y526C | none reported | not applicable | not applicable | 30 |
NA, not available, 1,2,3indicate familial relation, 4indicates single patients that have been already published,30 but were included to demonstrate familial relation to others in the table.
Figure 3(A) Box plots showing the median age of onset for selected patient groups with the highest frequencies in the cohort. Statistical testing was performed using a Kruskal‐Wallis test followed by Bonferroni correction, ***P < 0.001. (B) Kaplan‐Meier survival curve measuring the OTSE. The groups were found to have significantly different cum. survival rates as demonstrated by the Log‐rank test, P < 0.001.
Figure 4(A) Percentage of spinal vs. bulbar onset for the four most prevalent groups. Note the high rate of patients with a P525L or frameshift/truncating mutation presenting with bulbar disease, whereas R521 carriers mostly show spinal disease course. (B) Median age of onset and (C) OTSE grouped by spinal or bulbar disease onset. FUS‐ALS patients with bulbar onset had a significantly lower age of onset and survival as revealed by Mann‐Whitney U test. (D) Median survival time for selected mutation carriers grouped by side of onset. *P < 0.05, ***P < 0.001.
Figure 1Age at onset of newly acquired patients (=cohort 1) depicted as bar diagram for every case starting from the median value, n = 30. Similarly, data of all patients (cohort 1 and 2) are shown in Figure S1.
Figure 2(A), (B) Boxplot diagrams of disease duration (onset to severe event, OTSE) and age of onset (AoO) depending on individual mutation sites in the combined group. The median value of the total group is drawn as broken line. Mutation sites were selected if information was available on ≥ 2 cases. (C) Scatter blots of AoO and OTSE indicating moderate positive correlation.
Descriptive data of frequent FUS mutation carriers in the combined group.
| R521 | R495* | Frameshift | R514 | P525L | R524 | G507D | K510R | R522 | Y526C | Remaining | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AoO (y) | 43 (39–48, | 28 (24–31, | 26 (22–31, | 39 (36–42, | 19.5 (13–22, | 55 (34–61, | 59.5 (34.7–80, | 40 (39–55, | 50 (30.8–70.2, | 28.5 (24–33, | 47 (34–72.5, | 39 (33.5–41, |
| OTSE (m) | 31 (25–40, | 18 (12–48, | 19 (12.5–26, | 17.5 (13–22, | 13 (10–20) | 36 (10–39, | 42 ( | 78 (72–102, | 24 ( | 19 (16–22. | 54.5 (24–108, | 24 (20–28.5, |
Median values (95% Confidence interval of the median) for the age of onset (AoO) and survival time until severe event (OTSE) are shown for patient groups with given mutation patterns.