Friedreich's ataxia: Point mutations and clinical presentation of compound heterozygotes

Mireille Coss�e(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Alexandra D�rr(Inserm), Mich�le Schmitt(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Niklas Dahl(Uppsala University Hospital), P Trouillas(Hôpital Pierre Wertheimer), Patricia Allinson(Children's Medical Center), Markus Kostrzewa(Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen), A Nivelon‐Chevallier(Hôpital d'Enfants), Karl-Henrik Gustavson(Uppsala University Hospital), Alfried Kohlsch�tter(Eppendorf (Germany)), Ulrich M�ller(Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen), Jean‐Louis Mandel(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Alexis Brice(Inserm), Michel Kœnig(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Francesca Cavalcanti, Angela Tammaro, Giuseppe De Michele(Federico II University Hospital), Alessandro Filla(Federico II University Hospital), Sergio Cocozza, Malgorzata Labuda(McGill University Health Centre), Laura Montermini(McGill University Health Centre), Jos�e Poirier(McGill University Health Centre), Massimo Pandolfo(McGill University Health Centre)
Cited by 384

Abstract

Friedreich's ataxia is the most common inherited ataxia. Ninety-six percent of patients are homozygous for GAA trinucleotide repeat expansions in the first intron of the frataxin gene. The remaining cases are compound heterozygotes for a GAA expansion and a frataxin point mutation. We report here the identification of 10 novel frataxin point mutations, and the detection of a previously described mutation (G130V) in two additional families. Most truncating mutations were in exon 1. All missense mutations were in the last three exons coding for the mature frataxin protein. The clinical features of 25 patients with identified frataxin point mutations were compared with those of 196 patients homozygous for the GAA expansion. A similar phenotype resulted from truncating mutations and from missense mutations in the carboxy-terminal half of mature frataxin, suggesting that they cause a comparable loss of function. In contrast, the only two missense mutations located in the amino-terminal half of mature frataxin (D122Y and G130V) cause an atypical and milder clinical presentation (early-onset spastic gait with slow disease progression, absence of dysarthria, retained or brisk tendon reflexes, and mild or no cerebellar ataxia), suggesting that they only partially affect frataxin function. The incidence of optic disk pallor was higher in compound heterozygotes than in expansion homozygotes, which might correlate with a very low residual level of normal frataxin produced from the expanded allele.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis