Insights into familial adult myoclonus epilepsy pathogenesis: How the same repeat expansion in six unrelated genes may lead to cortical excitability

Author:

Depienne Christel1ORCID,van den Maagdenberg Arn M. J. M.23ORCID,Kühnel Theresa1ORCID,Ishiura Hiroyuki45ORCID,Corbett Mark A.6ORCID,Tsuji Shoji47ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Human Genetics University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg‐Essen Essen Germany

2. Department of Human Genetics Leiden University Medical Center Leiden the Netherlands

3. Department of Neurology Leiden University Medical Center Leiden the Netherlands

4. Department of Neurology Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences Okayama Japan

5. Department of Neurology, Graduate School of Medicine The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

6. Robinson Research Institute University of Adelaide, Adelaide Medical School Adelaide South Australia Australia

7. Institute of Medical Genomics International University of Health and Welfare Chiba Japan

Abstract

AbstractFamilial adult myoclonus epilepsy (FAME) results from the same pathogenic TTTTA/TTTCA pentanucleotide repeat expansion in six distinct genes encoding proteins with different subcellular localizations and very different functions, which poses the issue of what causes the neurobiological disturbances that lead to the clinical phenotype. Postmortem and electrophysiological studies have pointed to cortical hyperexcitability as well as dysfunction and neurodegeneration of both the cortex and cerebellum of FAME subjects. FAME expansions, contrary to the same expansion in DAB1 causing spinocerebellar ataxia type 37, seem to have no or limited impact on their recipient gene expression, which suggests a pathophysiological mechanism independent of the gene and its function. Current hypotheses include toxicity of the RNA molecules carrying UUUCA repeats, or toxicity of polypeptides encoded by the repeats, a mechanism known as repeat‐associated non‐AUG translation. The analysis of postmortem brains of FAME1 expansion (in SAMD12) carriers has revealed the presence of RNA foci that could be formed by the aggregation of RNA molecules with abnormal UUUCA repeats, but evidence is still lacking for other FAME subtypes. Even when the expansion is located in a gene ubiquitously expressed, expression of repeats remains undetectable in peripheral tissues (blood, skin). Therefore, the development of appropriate cellular models (induced pluripotent stem cell‐derived neurons) or the study of affected tissues in patients is required to elucidate how FAME repeat expansions located in unrelated genes lead to disease.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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