Genetic Variants Associated with the Age of Onset Identified by Whole-Exome Sequencing in Fatal Familial Insomnia

Author:

Thüne Katrin12,Schmitz Matthias12ORCID,Wiedenhöft John3ORCID,Shomroni Orr4,Göbel Stefan1,Bunck Timothy1,Younas Neelam1,Zafar Saima1ORCID,Hermann Peter1,Zerr Inga12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, National Reference Center for Human Spongiform Encephalopathies, University Medical Center, Georg-August University, 37075 Goettingen, Germany

2. German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), 37075 Goettingen, Germany

3. Scientific Core Facility Medical Biometry and Statistical Bioinformatics, University Medical Center Goettingen, 37075 Goettingen, Germany

4. NGS-Core Unit for Integrative Genomics, Institute of Human Genetics, University Medical Center Goettingen, 37075 Goettingen, Germany

Abstract

Fatal familial insomnia (FFI) is a rare autosomal-dominant inherited prion disease with a wide variability in age of onset. Its causes are not known. In the present study, we aimed to analyze genetic risk factors other than the prion protein gene (PRNP), in FFI patients with varying ages of onset. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) analysis was performed for twenty-five individuals with FFI (D178N-129M). Gene ontology enrichment analysis was carried out by Reactome to generate hypotheses regarding the biological processes of the identified genes. In the present study, we used a statistical approach tailored to the specifics of the data and identified nineteen potential gene variants with a potential effect on the age of onset. Evidence for potential disease modulatory risk loci was observed in two pseudogenes (NR1H5P, GNA13P1) and three protein coding genes (EXOC1L, SRSF11 and MSANTD3). These genetic variants are absent in FFI patients with early disease onset (19–40 years). The biological function of these genes and PRNP is associated with programmed cell death, caspase-mediated cleavage of cytoskeletal proteins and apoptotic cleavage of cellular proteins. In conclusions, our study provided first evidence for the involvement of genetic risk factors additional to PRNP, which may influence the onset of clinical symptoms in FFI.

Funder

Robert Koch Institute through funds of the Federal Ministry of Health

Alzheimer Forschungs Initiative

Joint Programming Neurodegenerative Disease

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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