| Literature DB >> 34652888 |
Pei-Chien Tsai1, Jong-Ling Fuh2,3,4, Chih-Chao Yang5, Anna Chang6, Li-Ming Lien6, Pei-Ning Wang2,3,4, Kuan-Lin Lai2,3,4, Yu-Shuen Tsai7, Yi-Chung Lee2,3,4, Yi-Chu Liao2,3,4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Mutations in the colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor gene (CSF1R) were identified as a cause of adult-onset inherited leukoencephalopathy. The present study aims at investigating the frequency, clinical characteristics, and functional effects of CSF1R mutations in Taiwanese patients with adult-onset leukoencephalopathy.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34652888 PMCID: PMC8607455 DOI: 10.1002/acn3.51467
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Clin Transl Neurol ISSN: 2328-9503 Impact factor: 4.511
The rare CSF1R variants identified in this study.
|
| Location | Bioinformatics prediction | Population controls | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nucleotide | Amino acid | Exon | Domain | MutationTester | PolyPhen2 | CADD Phred score | ClinVar | gnomAD | TaiwanView |
| c.236C > T | p.T79M | 3 | IG | Disease causing | Damaging | 22.2 | Not reported | None | None |
| c.1432G > A | p.E478K | 10 | IG | Tolerated | Benign | 11.8 | Not reported | None | None |
| c.1520_1522dupCGC | p.T507_H508InsP | 11 | TM | Tolerated | NA. | NA | Not reported | None | None |
| c.1754dupT | p. K586* | 13 | TKD | Disease causing | NA | NA | Not reported | None | None |
| c.1765G > A | p.G589R | 13 | TKD | Disease causing | Damaging | 29.8 | Pathogenic | None | None |
| c.2330G > A | p.R777Q | 18 | TKD | Disease causing | Damaging | 32 | Pathogenic | None | None |
| c.2344C > T | p.R782C | 18 | TKD | Disease causing | Damaging | 24.1 | Not reported | None | None |
| c.2740G > A | p.A914T | 21 | C‐terminal | Tolerated | Benign | 3.4 | Not reported | EA: 1/19952 | 2/1513 |
ClinVar, a public archive of interpretations of clinically relevant variants (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/clinvar/); CADD, Combined Annotation Dependent Depletion; IG, immunoglobulin‐like domain; TM, transmembrane domain; TKD, tyrosine kinase domain; C‐terminal, carboxyl‐terminal; EA, East Asian; gnomAD, genome Aggregation Database (http://gnomad.broadinstitute.org); TaiwanView, 1517 healthy Taiwanese control exomes were publically available in the Taiwan Biobank database (https://taiwanview.twbiobank.org.tw/index); NA, not applicable.
Figure 1Genetic analysis of the CSF1R mutations identified in the Taiwanese patients with leukoencephalopathy. (A) Schematic illustration of the structure of CSF1R protein and position of the rare CSF1R variants identified in this study. IG = immunoglobulin‐like domain; TM = transmembrane domain; TKD = tyrosine kinase domain. (B) Alignment of multiple CSF1R protein orthologs showing evolutionary conservation of the amino acid residues altered by the putative pathogenic mutations. (C) Sanger sequencing trace demonstrating the five heterozygous CSF1R pathogenic mutations and corresponding wide‐type control sequences. (D) Pedigrees of the five index patients harboring a CSF1R pathogenic mutation. Open symbol: unaffected; filled symbol: affected; symbol with a diagonal line: deceased; arrow: proband; square: male; circle: female.
Figure 2In vitro analysis of CSF1‐induced autophosphorylation of CSF1R mutant proteins. Representative western blots of lysates from HeLa cells that were transfected with wide‐type (WT) or mutant CSF1R expressing constructs with or without colony‐stimulating factor 1 (CSF1) treatment. Immunoblotting analysis using anti‐CSF1R antibody revealed comparable expression between WT and mutant CSF1R proteins. To evaluate the CSF1‐induced autophosphorylation activity of each CSF1R mutant, protein lysates were compared between CSF1‐treated and untreated cells expressing either one of the CSF1R mutant proteins. The five CSF1R mutants (T79M, K586*, G589R, R777Q, and R782C CSF1R) and the positive control M875T CSF1R had lost their ability to phosphorylate the Tyr546, Tyr699, Tyr723, and Tyr923 residues within CSF1R upon CSF1 stimulation, whereas the other three CSF1R mutants (E478K, T507_H508InsP, and A914T CSF1R) had preserved function of the CSF1‐induced autophosphorylation. Experiments were repeated three times with similar results. The equivalent amount of protein loading is shown using Actin as a loading control.
Clinical features and cognitive tests of the patients carrying a CSF1R pathogenic mutation.
| Patient no | Patient I | Patient II | Patient III | Patient IV | Patient V |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mutation | p.T79M | p.K586* | p.G589R | p.R777Q | p.R782C |
| Age at onset, sex | 86 y, male | 79 y, male | 43 y, female | 41 y, female | 50 y, male |
| Family history of dementia | None | Brother, sister | Brother | None | None |
| Personal history | HTN, DM, Lipid, CKD, CHF, smoking | None | None | Sjogren's syndrome, Hashimoto thyroiditis | None |
| Cognitive tests, score (percentile score) | |||||
| Age at exam | 87 y | 82 y | 46 y | 44 y | 54 y |
| Education | 16 y | 12 y | 9 y | 12 y | 12 y |
| Mini‐mental status examination | 17 (≦1%) | 22 (≦1%) | 20 (≦1%) | 7 (≦1%) | 21 (≦1%) |
| Delayed recalls at 12‐item test | 1 (<2%) | 4 (5%–9%) | 5 (10%–30%) | ND | 5 (10%–30%) |
| Category verbal fluency | 5 (<3%) | 4 (<3%) | 6 (<3%) | ND | 8 (<11%) |
| Trial making test A | 360 sec (<1%) | 190 sec (<2%) | 150 sec (<2%) | ND | ND |
| Forward digit span test | 6 (<5%) | 5 (<1%) | 9 (>19%) | ND | 7 (5%–19%) |
| Backward digit span test | 2 (<2%) | 3 (4%–16%) | 2 (<2%) | ND | 2 (<2%) |
| Behavior changes | None | None | None | Repetition, stereotyping | Compulsive behavior |
| Psychiatric problems | None | Liable mood, anxiety | Depression | Apathy, social withdraw | Apathy, agitation |
| Parkinsonism | Postural tremor | Small steps, ataxic gait | Bradykinesia, rigidity, freezing gait | Action and postural tremor | None |
| Seizure | None | None | None | GTCS | None |
HTN, hypertension; DM, Diabetes mellitus; Lipid, hyperlipidemia; CKD, chronic kidney disease; CHF, congestive heart failure; ND, not done; GTCS, generalized tonic clonic seizure; y, years; sec, seconds. The raw score and percentile score of each cognitive test were shown. The percentile score falling below 1.5 standard deviations (i.e. <16%) of the normative data was defined as significantly impaired.
Figure 3Representative magnetic resonance imaging of the patients with CSF1R‐related leukoencephalopathy. AE, age at the examination; FLAIR, fluid‐attenuated inversion recovery; DWI, diffusion‐weighted imaging.
Neuroimaging characteristics of the patients with CSF1R‐related leukoencephalopathy.
| Patient no/mutation | Patient I/p.T79M | Patient II/p.K586* | Patient III/p.G589R | Patient IV/p.R777Q | Patient V/p.R782C |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| White matter hyperintensity | Frontoparietal region, anterior temporal pole | Frontoparietal region | Frontoparietal region | Frontal involvement predominant | Frontal involvement predominant |
| Thinning or hyperintensity of corpus callosum | Present | Present | Present | Present | Present |
| Cavum septum pellucidum | None | None | Present | Present | Present |
| DWI (diffusion‐weighted imaging) of MRI | |||||
| Diffusion‐restricted lesions | None | Bilateral corticospinal tracts | Bilateral corticospinal tracts, corpus callosum, periventricular white matter | Frontoparietal periventricular white matter | ND |
| CT (computed tomography) | |||||
| Calcification | None | None | Periventricular, parietal subcortical regions | ND | ND |
FLAIR, fluid‐attenuated inversion recovery; ND, not done.