| Literature DB >> 33841314 |
Suzanne Lesage1, Graziella Mangone1, Christelle Tesson1, Hélène Bertrand1, Mustapha Benmahdjoub2, Selma Kesraoui2, Mohamed Arezki2, Andrew Singleton3, Jean-Christophe Corvol1, Alexis Brice1.
Abstract
Autosomal recessive early-onset parkinsonism is clinically and genetically heterogeneous. Mutations of three genes, PRKN, PINK1, and DJ-1 cause pure phenotypes usually characterized by levodopa-responsive Parkinson's disease. By contrast, mutations of other genes, including ATP13A2, PLA2G6, FBXO7, DNAJC6, SYNJ1, VPS13C, and PTRHD1, cause rarer, more severe diseases with a poor response to levodopa, generally with additional atypical features. We performed data mining on a gene panel or whole-exome sequencing in 460 index cases with early-onset (≤ 40 years) Parkinson's disease, including 57 with autosomal recessive disease and 403 isolated cases. We identified two isolated cases carrying biallelic mutations of SYNJ1 (double-heterozygous p.D791fs/p.Y232H and homozygous p. Y832C mutations) and two siblings with the recurrent homozygous p.R258Q mutation. All four variants were absent or rare in the Genome Aggregation Database, were predicted to be deleterious on in silico analysis and were found to be highly conserved between species. The patient with both the previously unknown p.D791fs and p.Y232H mutations presented with dystonia-parkinsonism accompanied by a frontal syndrome and oculomotor disturbances at the age of 39. In addition, two siblings from an Algerian consanguineous family carried the homozygous p.R258Q mutation and presented generalized tonic-clonic seizures during childhood, with severe intellectual disability, followed by progressive parkinsonism during their teens. By contrast, the isolated patient with the homozygous p. Y832C mutation, diagnosed at the age of 20, had typical parkinsonism, with no atypical symptoms and slow disease progression. Our findings expand the mutational spectrum and phenotypic profile of SYNJ1-related parkinsonism.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson's disease; SYNJ1; atypical Parkinson's disease; autosomal recessive inheritance; early-onset parkinsonism
Year: 2021 PMID: 33841314 PMCID: PMC8027075 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.648457
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1(A) Pedigrees of the family and the two isolated cases with early-onset Parkinson's disease carrying SYNJ1 mutations. Affected family members are represented by black circles (female) or squares (male). The arrow indicates the index cases. Double lines indicate consanguineous parents. The corresponding Sanger sequence electrophoregrams are shown. The p.R258Q mutation segregated with the phenotype in the FPD-1458 family: the p.R258Q genotypes are highlighted by a red arrow (heterozygous state for individuals 3, 4, and 7 and homozygous for the two affected siblings, 6 and 9). (B) Evolutionary conservation of the regions of the p.Y232 amino-acid sequences (download from Alamut® Visual software, https://www.interactive-biosoftware.com/alamut-visual/). (C) Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for patient FPD-1458-9 showing the normal appearance of the various slices.
Figure 2Schematic representation of the longer isoform of the synaptojanin 1 protein, its functional domains, and all associated mutations identified to date. Those found in patients with parkinsonism are shown in red (in bold, those identified in this study), and those found in patients with intractable seizures and severe neurodegeneration are shown in blue. Sac1, suppressor of actin (Sac1-like inositol domain); 5′PP, inositol-5′-phosphatase domain; PRD, prolin-rich domain.
Clinical features of patients with biallelic mutations of the SYNJ1 gene.
| Our study | FPD-1458-9 | p.R258Q (hom) | Algeria | M/25 | AR/Yes | 20 | Parkinsonism, dysarthria, dystonia, drooling, postural instability, CI | Yes (2 y) | Partial with dyskinesia | Normal brain MRI |
| FPD-1458-6 | p.R258Q (hom) | Algeria | F/31 | AR/Yes | 26 | Parkinsonism, dystonia, amimia, CI | Yes (14 y) | Good, with adverse effects (dyskinesia, motor fluctuations, dystonia) | NA | |
| SPD-174-10 | p.Y832C (hom) | Senegal | M/35 | Spo/Yes | 20 | Parkinsonism | No information | Unknown | NA | |
| SPD-68-1 | p.Y232H/p.D791Ifs*4 | France | F/61 | Spo/No | 39 | Parkinsonism, facial and cervical dystonia, vertical gaze palsy, moderate dysarthria, hypophonia, postural instability, brisk deep tendon reflexes, MMSE 21/30 | No | Good, with adverse effects (oromandibular and limb dystonias) | Normal brain CT scan | |
| Krebs et al. ( | Patient I | p.R258Q (hom) | Iran | M/29 | AR/yes | 20 | Parkinsonism, eyelid apraxia and dysarthria at the age of 22 years, hypophonia, resting tremor, chin tremor, postural instability, no CI | Yes (3 y) | Not tolerated (severe dyskinesia) | Mild cortical atrophy, bilateral white matter hyperintensity |
| Patient II | p.R258Q (hom) | Iran | F/39 | AR/yes | Early twenties | Parkinsonism, right hand tremor, eyelid apraxia, severe jaw tremor, anarthria, requiring assistance to walk at the age of 32, bedbound at 37, no CI | Febrile convulsion in infancy | Not tolerated (severe dyskinesia) | Foramen magnum meningioma at the age of 37 | |
| Quadri et al. ( | NAPO-16 | p.R258Q (hom) | Italy (Sicily) | M/47 | AR/yes | 22 | Parkinsonism, rest and action tremor, dystonia in both hands, postural instability, anarthria, severe dysarthria, eyelid apraxia and supranuclear vertical gaze palsy, dysphagia, CI | No | Not tolerated (oromandibular and limb dystonias, postural hypotension) | Diffuse cortex atrophy, hyperintensity of hippocampi, thinning midbrain quadrigeminal plate, nigrostriatal dopaminergic deficit, cortical hypometabolism |
| NAPO-17 | p.R258Q (hom) | Italy (Sicily) | F/31 | AR/yes | 28 | Parkinsonism, rest and action tremor, dystonia in the hands and feet, dysarthria, dysphonia, mild dysphagia, postural instability, supranuclear vertical gaze palsy, brisk deep tendon reflexes, CI (MMSE 26/30) | No | Not tolerated (oromandibular and limb dystonias, postural hypotension) | Diffuse cortex atrophy, hyperintensity of hippocampi, thinning midbrain quadrigeminal plate, cortical hypometabolism | |
| Olgiati et al. ( | NAPO-41 | p.R258Q (hom) | Italy (Naples) | M/31 | AR/No | 28 | Parkinsonism, hypomimia, oromandibular tremor, trunk dystonia, impaired speech, postural instability, mild supranuclear vertical gaze limitation, drooling, dysphagia at the age of 31, MMSE 28/30 | One episode (uncertain) | Not treated | No gross abnormalities, normal brain MRI, nigrostriatal dopaminergic deficit, mild bilateral hypometabolism |
| NAPO-42 | p.R258Q (hom) | Italy (Naples) | F/27 | AR/No | 26 | Parkinsonism, hypomimia, oromandibular tremor, impaired speech, brisk deep tendon reflexes, MMSE 25/30 | One episode (16 y) | Not treated | No gross abnormalities, normal brain MRI, nigrostriatal dopaminergic deficit, mild bilateral hypometabolism | |
| Kirola et al. ( | H1_1 | p.R459P (hom) | India/M | M/32 | AR/yes | 12 | Parkinsonism, drooling, dystonia, dysarthria, dysphagia, hypophonia, intense constipation, falling backwards, postural instability, no dementia | No information | Not tolerated (dyskinesia and dystonia) | Hyperintensity in substantia nigra |
| H1_2 | p.R459P (hom) | India/F | F/22 | AR/yes | 18 | Parkinsonism, drooling, dystonia, dysathria, dysphagia, hypophonia, falling backwards, constipation, no dementia | No information | Not tolerated (dyskinesia and dystonia) | NA | |
| Rauschendorf et al. ( | Patient 1 | p.W171*/p.R258Q (compound het) | Germany | M/21 | AR/No | 15 | Generalized dystonia, Parkinsonism, severe action tremor of the tongue, head, and extremities, anarthria, CI | Yes (3–4 y) | Excellent (with L-dopa-induced dyskinesia) | Bilateral nigrostriatal dopaminergic deficit, bilateral caudate hypometabolism |
| Patient 2 | p.W171*/p.R258Q (compound het) | Germany | M/32 | AR/No | 13 | Generalized dystonia, Parkinsonism, action tremor of the upper extremities, chin and tongue | First days of life | Good (no dyskinesia) | Bilateral nigrostriatal dopaminergic deficit, bilateral caudate hypometabolism | |
| Taghavi et al. ( | F22P1 | p.R839C (hom) | Iran | M/30 | AR/Yes | 24 | Parkinsonism, chin tremor, dysarthria, longitudinally fissured tongue, postural instability | Yes (24 y) | Poor | NA |
| F22P2 | p.R839C (hom) | Iran | F/47 | AR/Yes | 27 | Parkinsonism, postural instability | No | Poor | NA | |
| Ben Romdhan et al. ( | PD1 | p.L1406Ffs*42/p.K1321E (compound het) | Tunisia | M/23 | AR/Yes | 16 | Parkinsonism, postural instability dystonia in the left arm, dysarthria, moderate CI (MMSE 20/30) | Yes (7 y) | Good (no dyskinesia) | Normal brain MRI |
| PD2 | p.L1406Ffs*42/p.K1321E (compound het) | Tunisia | F/24 | AR/Yes | 21 | Parkinsonism, postural instability, supranuclear vertical gaze palsy, moderate CI (MMSE 21/30) | No | Good (no motor complications) | Normal brain MRI | |
| Hong et al. ( | II1 | p.A860Gfs*5/p.P1282L (compound het) | China | F/35 | AR/No | 31 | Parkinsonism, mild dysarthria, diplopia, dystonia, MMSE 28/30 | No information | Poor | Mild cortical atrophy |
| II3 | p.A860Gfs*5/p.P1282L (compound het) | China | M/30 | AR/No | 28 | Parkinsonism, diplopia, dystonia, MMSE 29/30 | No information | Poor | Normal brain MRI | |
| Xie et al. ( | Patient 1 | p.Y832C (hom) | China | F/52 | AR/Yes | 40 | Parkinsonism, MMSE 30/30 | No | Good | NA |
| Patient 2 | p.Y832C (hom) | China | M/54 | AR/Yes | 52 | Parkinsonism | No | Not prescribed levodopa | NA | |
| Kumar et al. ( | 114 | p.R459H (hom) | India | No information | No information | 34 | Parkinsonism with poor information | No information | Unknown | NA |
| Dyment et al. ( | 1 | p.R136* (hom) | Pakistan | M/died at 6.5 years of age | Spo/Yes | NA | No parkinsonism, progressive neurodegenerative course, feeding intolerance at age of 1 year, and G tube dependence at the age of 2 years, hypotonia progressing to multiple contractures, no vocalization, cortical blindness | Yes (9 d) | Unknown | Brain MRI: mild cerebral atrophy at the age of 5 years |
| Hardies et al. ( | Family A/1 | p.Y888C (hom) | Morocco | F/7 | AR/Yes | NA | No parkinsonism, progressive neurodegenerative course, feeding problems, hypotonia progressing to spastic tetraplegia, central visual impairment, severe intellectual disability | Yes (2.5 m) | Unknown | Normal brain MRI |
| Family A/2 | p.Y888C (hom) | Morocco | M/6 | AR/Yes | NA | No parkinsonism, progressive neurodegenerative course, feeding problems, hypotonia progressing to spastic tetraplegia, central visual impairment, severe intellectual disability | Yes (6 m) | Unknown | Normal brain MRI | |
| Family B/1 | p.W843* (hom) | Morocco | F/5 | AR/Yes | NA | No parkinsonism, profound intellectual disability, progressive spastic tetraplegia, feeding problems with gastrostomy | Yes (1 d) | Unknown | Normal brain MRI | |
| Family B/2 | p.W843* (hom) | Morocco | F/2.5 | AR/Yes | NA | No parkinsonism, profound intellectual disability, progressive spastic tetraplegia, feeding problems with gastrostomy | Yes (1 d) | Unknown | Normal brain MRI | |
| Family C/1 | Q647Rfs*6/p.S1122Tfs*3 (compound het) | Caucasian | M/died at the age of 2.5 years | AR/No | NA | No parkinsonism, profound intellectual disability, tube fed, dystonia | Yes (12 d) | Unknown | Normal brain MRI at age 6 | |
| Family C/2 | Q647Rfs*6/p.S1122Tfs*3 (compound het) | Caucasian | M/died at the age of 8 years | AR/No | NA | No parkinsonism, profound intellectual disability, progressive spastic tetraplegia, feeding problems with gastrostomy | Yes (1 d) | Unknown | Brain MRI: thin corpus callosum and limited gliosis and atrophy of the periventricular white matter | |
| Al Zaabi et al. ( | Case 1 | p.Q237*(hom) | Oman | F/2 | Spo/Yes | NA | No parkinsonism, profound intellectual disability, no feeding difficulties, scoliosis, significant truncal and peripheral hypotonia, and persistent palmer and plantar reflexes | Yes (2 d) | Unknown | Normal brain MRI |
| Case 2 | p.Q237*(hom) | Oman | M/2 | First cousin of case 1/Yes | NA | No parkinsonism, microcephaly at the age of 2 years, profound intellectual disability, feeding problems, dysphagia and palatal insufficiency, head lag and axial hypotonia with hyperreflexia and clonus | Yes | Unknown | Brain MRI: mild dilation of the ventricles and subarachnoid spaces | |
| Samanta et al. ( | Patient 1 | p.Q287Pfs*27 (hom) | Saudi Arabia | F/2 | Spo/Yes | NA | No parkinsonism, profound intellectual disability, profound hypotonia, feeding problems, severe cortical visual impairment, hypotonia progressing to spastic tetraplegia, brisk deep tendon reflexes, dystonia of upper extremities | Yes (2 d) | Unknown | Normal brain MRI |
AAE, age at last examination; AR, autosomal recessive; CI, cognitive impairment; CT, computed tomography; d, day; F, female; het, heterozygote; hom, homozygote; M, male; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; m, months; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; NA, not available; Spo, sporadic; y, year.
unknown parental phase.