A Novel Homozygous Founder Variant of RTN4IP1 in Two Consanguineous Saudi Families

Author:

Aldosary Mazhor,Alsagob Maysoon,AlQudairy Hanan,González-Álvarez Ana C.,Arold Stefan T.ORCID,Dababo Mohammad Anas,Alharbi Omar A.,Almass Rawan,AlBakheet AlBandary,AlSarar Dalia,Qari Alya,Al-Ansari Mysoon M.ORCID,Oláhová Monika,Al-Shahrani Saif A.,AlSayed Moeenaldeen,Colak DilekORCID,Taylor Robert W.ORCID,AlOwain Mohammed,Kaya NamikORCID

Abstract

The genetic architecture of mitochondrial disease continues to expand and currently exceeds more than 350 disease-causing genes. Bi-allelic variants in RTN4IP1, also known as Optic Atrophy-10 (OPA10), lead to early-onset recessive optic neuropathy, atrophy, and encephalopathy in the afflicted patients. The gene is known to encode a mitochondrial ubiquinol oxidoreductase that interacts with reticulon 4 and is thought to be a mitochondrial antioxidant NADPH oxidoreductase. Here, we describe two unrelated consanguineous families from the northern region of Saudi Arabia harboring a missense variant (RTN4IP1:NM_032730.5; c.475G<T, p.Val159Phe) in the gene. Clinically affected individuals presented with intellectual disability, encephalopathy, ataxia, optic atrophy, and seizures. Based on whole exome sequencing and confirmatory Sanger sequencing, the variant was fully segregated with the phenotype in the families, absent among large ethnically matching controls as well as numerous in-house exomes, and predicted to be pathogenic by different in silico classifiers. Structural modeling and immunoblot analyses strongly indicated this variant to be pathogenic. Since the families belong to one of the tribal inhabitants of Saudi Arabia, we postulate that the variant is likely to be a founder. We provide the estimated age of the variant and present data confirming the disease-causality of this founder variant.

Funder

King Salman Center for Disability Research

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

Wellcome Centre for Mitochondrial Research

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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