| Literature DB >> 34066864 |
Amanat Ali1, Nahid Al Dhahouri1, Fatmah Saeed Ali Almesmari1, Waseem Mahmoud Fathalla2, Fatma Al Jasmi1,3.
Abstract
Glutaric aciduria type II (GA-II) is a rare autosomal recessive disease caused by defects in electron transfer flavoprotein (ETF), ultimately causing insufficiencies in multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MAD). 3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (3-PHGDH) deficiency, is another rare autosomal disorder that appears due to a defect in the synthesis of L-serine amino acid. Several mutations of ETFDH and PHGDH genes have been associated with different forms of GA-II and serine deficiency, respectively. In this study, we report a unique case of GA-II with serine deficiency using biochemical, genetic, and in silico approaches. The proband of Syrian descent had positive newborn screening (NBS) for GA-II. At two years of age, the patient presented with developmental regression, ataxia, and intractable seizures. Results of amino acid profiling demonstrated extremely low levels of serine. Confirmatory tests for GA-II and whole exome sequencing (WES) were performed to determine the etiology of intractable seizure. Sequencing results indicated a previously reported homozygous missense mutation, c.679 C>A (p.Pro227Thr) in the ETFDH gene and a novel missense homozygous mutation c.1219 T>C (p.Ser407Pro) in the PHGDH gene. In silico tools predicted these mutations as deleterious. Here, the clinical and biochemical investigations indicate that ETFDH:p.Pro227Thr and PHGDH:p.Ser407Pro variants likely underlie the pathogenesis of GA-II and serine deficiency, respectively. This study indicates that two rare autosomal recessive disorders should be considered in consanguineous families, more specifically in those with atypical presentation.Entities:
Keywords: 3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase; GA-II; Syria; electron transfer flavoprotein dehydrogenase; serine deficiency; whole exome sequencing
Year: 2021 PMID: 34066864 PMCID: PMC8150808 DOI: 10.3390/genes12050703
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Quantitative acylcarnitine profile of the patient.
| Analyte | Result | Interpretation | Reference Range | Unit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acetylcarnitine, C2 | 7.32 | N | 2.14–15.89 | nmol/mL |
| Propionylcarnitine, C3 | 1.16 |
| <0.55 | nmol/mL |
| Iso-/Butyrylcarnitine, C4 | 0.38 | N | <0.46 | nmol/mL |
| Isovaleyrl-/2-Methylbutyrylcarnitine, C5 | 0.28 | N | <0.38 | nmol/mL |
| Glutarylcarnitine, C5:DC | 0.07 |
| <0.06 | nmol/mL |
| Hexanoylcarnitine, C6 | 0.19 |
| <0.14 | nmol/mL |
| 3-OH-hexanoylcarnitine, C6-OH | 0.01 | N | <0.08 | nmol/mL |
| Octanoylcarnitine, C8 | 0.47 |
| <0.19 | nmol/mL |
| Octenoylcarnitine, C8:1 | 0.20 | N | <0.48 | nmol/mL |
| Decanoylcarnitine, C10 | 0.77 |
| <0.27 | nmol/mL |
| Decenoylcarnitine, C10:1 | 0.20 | N | <0.25 | nmol/mL |
| Dodecanoylcarnitine, C12 | 0.28 |
| <0.18 | nmol/mL |
| 3-OH-dodecanoylcarnitine, C12-OH | 0.03 | N | <0.06 | nmol/mL |
| Tetradecanoylcarnitine, C14 | 0.12 |
| <0.11 | nmol/mL |
| Tetradecenoylcarnitine, C14:1 | 0.20 |
| <0.16 | nmol/mL |
| 3-OH-tetradecanoylcarnitine, C14-OH | 0.01 | N | <0.04 | nmol/mL |
| Hexadecanoylcarnitine, C16 | 0.13 | N | <0.36 | nmol/mL |
| Hexadecenoylcarnitine, C16:1 | 0.04 | N | <0.15 | nmol/mL |
| 3-OH-hexadecanoylcarnitine, C16-OH | 0.01 | N | <0.78 | nmol/mL |
| Stearoylcarnitine, C18 | 0.05 | N | <0.10 | nmol/mL |
| Oleylcarnitine, C18:1 | 0.16 | N | <0.25 | nmol/mL |
N: normal; H: High.
Figure 1The detailed pedigree, EEG, and brain MRI of the index patient performed at 2.5 years of age. (A) Family pedigree of three generations affected with GA-II and serine deficiency. Male and female are represented by squares and circles, respectively. The proband is represented with a filled circle. (B-1) Axial T2 shows normal basal ganglia; (B-2) Sagittal FLAIR signifies mild cerebellar atrophy shown in red arrow. (C) EEG shows diffuse slow background with prominent right occipital spike and slow-wave discharges.
Plasma and CSF levels of serine and glycine of the patient before and after the treatment with L-serine.
| Amino Acid | Before Treatment | After Treatment | Reference Range (1–5 Years) | Unit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plasma serine | 42 | 184 | 115–169 | µmol/L |
| Plasma Glycine | 96 | 145 | 175–283 | µmol/L |
| CSF serine | 6 | NP | 56–103 | µmol/L |
| CSF glycine | 8 | NP | 6.8–15 | µmol/L |
CSF: cerebrospinal fluid; NP: not performed.
In silico prediction and analysis of ETFDH and PHGDH variants detected in the patient.
| Gene | Missense Substitutions | Zygosity | Polyphen | SIFT | PROVEAN | PANTHER | DANN | GWAVA | Funseq2 | FATHMM | Frequency | JSD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| c. 679C>A; | Homozygous | 0.989 | 0.01 | −7.52 | 0.95 | 0.997 | 0.45 | 4 | 0.991 | 0.000025 | 0.782 |
|
| c. 1219T>C; | Homozygous | 0.736 | 0.041 | −1.79 | 0.27 | 0.994 | 0.28 | 4 | 0.620 | ND | 0.766 |
Polyphen-2 (higher scores indicate pathogenicity), SIFT (lower scores indicate pathogenicity), PROVEAN (protein variation effect analyzer, the cut-off score was −2.5, values equal to or above this threshold suggest the mutation is deleterious), PANTHER (Scores equal or above 0.5 indicate the mutation is deleterious or diseased), DANN (deleterious annotation of genetic variants using a neural network) is a method for scoring the deleteriousness of the SNVs (single nucleotide variants) using deep neural network classifier. GWAVA (genome-wide annotation of variants) is a method for scoring the deleteriousness of the SNVs based on random forest. Funseq2 is a method for scoring the deleteriousness of the SNVs based on a weighted scoring system that integrates genetic, epigenetic, and gene expression information. FATHMM (functional analysis through hidden Markov models) is a method for predicting pathogenicity based on multiple sequence alignment of protein sequences and/or structures. JSD score is used to determine the conservation of amino acids (higher scores demonstrate more conservation. Allele frequency was from the exome aggregation consortium (ExAc). ND: no data; D: deleterious; B: Benign; N: Neutral.
Figure 2The generated homology models of ETFDH and PHGDH. The functional domains of ETFDH and PHGDH are demonstrated in cartoon representation, and the amino acid is represented with a stick representation. The boxed region shown red in A and D is enlarged in the successive images. (A) Modeled structure of ETFDH; (B) Wild type Pro227; (C) Mutant Thr227. (D) Modeled structure of PHGDH; (E) Wild type Ser407; (F) Mutant Pro407. Multiple sequence alignment of twenty amino acids centered on the missense mutation obtained from different mammals. (G) ETFDH, P227T (c. 679C>A); (H) PHGDH, S407P (c. 1219T>C).