“Progressive myoclonic ataxia and developmental/epileptic encephalopathy associated with a novel homozygous mutation in TCN2 gene”

Author:

Oshi Mohammed Ahmed Mohammed1,Alfaifi Jaber2,Alqahtani Youssef Ali M.3,Aljabri Mohammed Fahad4,Kamal Naglaa M.5ORCID,Althopaity Jwaher6,Althobaiti Khalid A.4,Almalki Abdullah M.4,Abosabie Salma A. S.7,Abosabie Sara A.8,Sherbiny Hanan Sakr29,Almanjoomi Saif K.4,Abdallah Enas A. A.5

Affiliation:

1. Neurology Division Gaafar Ibnauf Children's Emergency Hospital Khartoum Sudan

2. Department of Child Health, College of Medicine University of Bisha Bisha Saudi Arabia

3. Department of Child Health, College of Medicine King Khalid University Abha Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

4. Alhada Armed Forces Hospital Taif Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

5. Department of Pediatrics and Pediatric Hepatology, Kasr Alainy Faculty of Medicine Cairo University Cairo Egypt

6. Department of Medical Genetics King Fahad Medical City Riyadh Saudi Arabia

7. Faculty of Medicine Julius‐Maximilians‐Universität Würzburg Wurzburg Bavaria Germany

8. Faculty of Medicine Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin Berlin Germany

9. Department of pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine Zagazig University Zagazig Egypt

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundTranscobalamin II (TCN2) defect is a rare metabolic disorder associated with a range of neurological manifestations, including mild developmental delay, severe intellectual disability, ataxia, and, in some cases, seizures. Cobalamin, an essential nutrient, plays a crucial role in central nervous system myelination.Clinical PresentationWe present a family with an index patient who exhibited progressive neurodevelopmental regression starting at 9 months of age, accompanied by myoclonic seizures, ataxia, and tremor. No significant hematological abnormalities were observed. Exome sequencing analysis identified a novel homozygous mutation, c.3G>A – P(Met1I), affecting the acceptor site of intron 4 of the TCN2 gene (chromosome 22: 31003321, NM_000355.4), leading to likely pathogenic variant potentially affecting translation. Following treatment with hydroxocobalamin, the patient demonstrated partial clinical improvement. He has a sibling with overt hematological abnormalities and subtle neurological abnormalities who is homozygous to the same mutation. Both parents are heterozygous for the same mutation.ConclusionsIn infants presenting with unexplained non‐specific neurological symptoms, irrespective of classical signs of vitamin B12 deficiency, evaluation for TCN2 defect should be considered. Early diagnosis and appropriate management can lead to favorable outcomes.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Vitamin B12 Metabolism: A Network of Multi-Protein Mediated Processes;International Journal of Molecular Sciences;2024-07-23

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