Author:
Sun Chong,Song Jie,Jiang Yanjun,Zhao Chongbo,Lu Jiahong,Li Yuxin,Wang Yin,Gao Mingshi,Xi Jianying,Luo Sushan,Li Meixia,Donaldson Kevin,Oprescu Stephanie N.,Slavin Thomas P.,Lee Sansan,Magoulas Pilar L.,Lewis Andrea M.,Emrick Lisa,Lalani Seema R.,Niu Zhiyv,Landsverk Megan L.,Walkiewicz Magdalena,Person Richard E.,Mei Hui,Rosenfeld Jill A.,Yang Yaping,Antonellis Anthony,Hou Ya-Ming,Lin Jie,Zhang Victor W.
Abstract
ObjectiveTo expand the clinical spectrum of lysyl-tRNA synthetase (KARS) gene–related diseases, which so far includes Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, congenital visual impairment and microcephaly, and nonsyndromic hearing impairment.MethodsWhole-exome sequencing was performed on index patients from 4 unrelated families with leukoencephalopathy. Candidate pathogenic variants and their cosegregation were confirmed by Sanger sequencing. Effects of mutations on KARS protein function were examined by aminoacylation assays and yeast complementation assays.ResultsCommon clinical features of the patients in this study included impaired cognitive ability, seizure, hypotonia, ataxia, and abnormal brain imaging, suggesting that the CNS involvement is the main clinical presentation. Six previously unreported and 1 known KARS mutations were identified and cosegregated in these families. Two patients are compound heterozygous for missense mutations, 1 patient is homozygous for a missense mutation, and 1 patient harbored an insertion mutation and a missense mutation. Functional and structural analyses revealed that these mutations impair aminoacylation activity of lysyl-tRNA synthetase, indicating that defective KARS function is responsible for the phenotypes in these individuals.ConclusionsOur results demonstrate that patients with loss-of-function KARS mutations can manifest CNS disorders, thus broadening the phenotypic spectrum associated with KARS-related disease.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Neurology (clinical)