A description of novel variants and review of phenotypic spectrum in UBA5 -related early epileptic encephalopathy

Early infantile epileptic encephalopathy-44 (EIEE44, MIM: 617132) is a previously described condition resulting from biallelic variants in , a gene involved in a ubiquitin-like post-translational modification system called UFMylation. Here we report five children from four families with biallelic pa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cold Spring Harbor molecular case studies 2021-06, Vol.7 (3), p.a005827
Hauptverfasser: Briere, Lauren C, Walker, Melissa A, High, Frances A, Cooper, Cynthia, Rogers, Cassandra A, Callahan, Christine J, Ishimura, Ryosuke, Ichimura, Yoshinobu, Caruso, Paul A, Sharma, Nutan, Brokamp, Elly, Koziura, Mary E, Mohammad, Shekeeb S, Dale, Russell C, Riley, Lisa G, Phillips, John A, Komatsu, Masaaki, Sweetser, David A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Early infantile epileptic encephalopathy-44 (EIEE44, MIM: 617132) is a previously described condition resulting from biallelic variants in , a gene involved in a ubiquitin-like post-translational modification system called UFMylation. Here we report five children from four families with biallelic pathogenic variants in All five children presented with global developmental delay, epilepsy, axial hypotonia, appendicular hypertonia, and a movement disorder, including dystonia in four. Affected individuals in all four families have compound heterozygous pathogenic variants in All have the recurrent mild c.1111G > A (p.Ala371Thr) variant in with a second variant. One patient has the previously described c.562C > T (p. Arg188*) variant, two other unrelated patients have a novel missense variant, c.907T > C (p.Cys303Arg), and the two siblings have a novel missense variant, c.761T > C (p.Leu254Pro). Functional analyses demonstrate that both the p.Cys303Arg variant and the p.Leu254Pro variants result in a significant decrease in protein function. We also review the phenotypes and genotypes of all 15 previously reported families with biallelic variants, of which two families have presented with distinct phenotypes, and we describe evidence for some limited genotype-phenotype correlation. The overlap of motor and developmental phenotypes noted in our cohort and literature review adds to the increasing understanding of genetic syndromes with movement disorders-epilepsy.
ISSN:2373-2865
2373-2873
DOI:10.1101/mcs.a005827