| Literature DB >> 32022482 |
Christophe Carreau1, Timothée Lenglet1,2, Isabelle Mosnier3, Ghizlene Lahlou3, Guillaume Fargeot2, Nicolas Weiss1, Sophie Demeret1, François Salachas1, Alice Veauville-Merllié4, Cécile Acquaviva4, Yann Nadjar1.
Abstract
Riboflavin transporter deficiency (RTD) was recently characterized as a cause of genetic recessive childhood-onset motor neuron disease (MND) with hearing loss, formerly described as Brown-Vialetto-Van-Lear syndrome. We describe a 18-year-old woman with probable RTD mimicking juvenile Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) who presented with an inaugural respiratory failure and moderate distal four limbs weakness. Only one heterozygous SLC52A3 mutation was detected, but presence of a sub-clinical auditory neuropathy and dramatic improvement under high dose riboflavin argued for a RTD. As RTD probably has a larger phenotypic spectrum than expected, a high dose riboflavin trial should be discussed in young-onset MND.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32022482 PMCID: PMC7034506 DOI: 10.1002/acn3.50977
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Clin Transl Neurol ISSN: 2328-9503 Impact factor: 4.511
Figure 1(A) Amyotrophy in both hands. B and C (L: Left, R: Right): Pure‐tone audiometry showing bilateral hearing loss with an air‐conduction average of 62 and 43 dB for the right and the left ear, respectively (B); auditory brainstem response showing the absence of compound action potentials (C).
Frequency, in silico prediction and conservation for the variant c.113G>C (p.Trp38Ser).
| Frequency | In silico prediction | Conservation | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| gnomAD | ESP | ExAc | Polyphen2 | Mutation taster | SIFT | GVGD | |
| Absent | Absent | Absent | Probably damaging (score = 1.000) | Pathogen | Deleterious (score = 0) | C65 | Very conserved among species and in the two other cytoplasmic transporters for riboflavin in human |