Literature DB >> 32901138

A relatively common homozygous TRAPPC4 splicing variant is associated with an early-infantile neurodegenerative syndrome.

Shereen G Ghosh1,2, Marcello Scala3,4, Reza Maroofian5, Joseph G Gleeson6,7, Christian Beetz8, Guy Helman9,10, Valentina Stanley1,2, Xiaoxu Yang1,2, Martin W Breuss1,2, Neda Mazaheri11, Laila Selim12, Fatemeh Hadipour13, Lynn Pais14, Chloe A Stutterd9,10,15, Vasiliki Karageorgou8, Amber Begtrup16, Amy Crunk16, Jane Juusola16, Rebecca Willaert16, Leigh A Flore17, Kelly Kennelly17, Christopher Spencer18, Martha Brown18, Pamela Trapane18, Anna C E Hurst19, S Lane Rutledge19, Dana H Goodloe19, Marie T McDonald20, Vandana Shashi20, Kelly Schoch20, Hoda Tomoum21, Raghda Zaitoun21, Zahra Hadipour13, Hamid Galehdari11, Alistair T Pagnamenta22, Majid Mojarrad23,24,25, Alireza Sedaghat26, Patrícia Dias27, Sofia Quintas28, Atiyeh Eslahi23,29, Gholamreza Shariati30, Peter Bauer8, Cas Simons9,10, Henry Houlden4, Mahmoud Y Issa31, Maha S Zaki31.   

Abstract

Trafficking protein particle (TRAPP) complexes, which include the TRAPPC4 protein, regulate membrane trafficking between lipid organelles in a process termed vesicular tethering. TRAPPC4 was recently implicated in a recessive neurodevelopmental condition in four unrelated families due to a shared c.454+3A>G splice variant. Here, we report 23 patients from 17 independent families with an early-infantile-onset neurodegenerative presentation, where we also identified the homozygous variant hg38:11:119020256 A>G (NM_016146.5:c.454+3A>G) in TRAPPC4 through exome or genome sequencing. No other clinically relevant TRAPPC4 variants were identified among any of over 10,000 patients with neurodevelopmental conditions. We found the carrier frequency of TRAPPC4 c.454+3A>G was 2.4-5.4 per 10,000 healthy individuals. Affected individuals with the homozygous TRAPPC4 c.454+3A>G variant showed profound psychomotor delay, developmental regression, early-onset epilepsy, microcephaly and progressive spastic tetraplegia. Based upon RNA sequencing, the variant resulted in partial exon 3 skipping and generation of an aberrant transcript owing to use of a downstream cryptic splice donor site, predicting a premature stop codon and nonsense mediated decay. These data confirm the pathogenicity of the TRAPPC4 c.454+3A>G variant, and refine the clinical presentation of TRAPPC4-related encephalopathy.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32901138      PMCID: PMC7868361          DOI: 10.1038/s41431-020-00717-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet        ISSN: 1018-4813            Impact factor:   4.246


  1 in total

1.  Recurrent bi-allelic splicing variant c.454+3A>G in TRAPPC4 is associated with progressive encephalopathy and muscle involvement.

Authors:  Parneet Kaur; Rajagopal Kadavigere; Katta Mohan Girisha; Anju Shukla
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2020-03-03       Impact factor: 13.501

  1 in total
  2 in total

1.  Lessons learnt from multifaceted diagnostic approaches to the first 150 families in Victoria's Undiagnosed Diseases Program.

Authors:  Thomas Cloney; Lyndon Gallacher; Lynn S Pais; Natalie B Tan; Alison Yeung; Zornitza Stark; Natasha J Brown; George McGillivray; Martin B Delatycki; Michelle G de Silva; Lilian Downie; Chloe A Stutterd; Justine Elliott; Alison G Compton; Alysia Lovgren; Ralph Oertel; David Francis; Katrina M Bell; Simon Sadedin; Sze Chern Lim; Guy Helman; Cas Simons; Daniel G Macarthur; David R Thorburn; Anne H O'Donnell-Luria; John Christodoulou; Susan M White; Tiong Yang Tan
Journal:  J Med Genet       Date:  2021-11-05       Impact factor: 5.941

2.  Severe Microcephaly and Rapid Deterioration Due to Cortical Atrophy in Early Infancy: Consider TRAPPC4 Trappopathy.

Authors:  Akgun Olmez; Selcan Zeybek
Journal:  Ann Indian Acad Neurol       Date:  2022-07-14       Impact factor: 1.714

  2 in total

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