Biallelic and de novo variants in ATP6V0A1 cause progressive myoclonus epilepsy and developmental and epileptic encephalopathy

Author:

Bott Laura C,Forouhan Mitra,Lieto Maria,Sala Ambre J,Ellerington Ruth,Johnson Janel O,Speciale Alfina A,Criscuolo Chiara,Filla Alessandro,Chitayat David,Nemeth Andrea H,Angelucci Francesco,Lim Wooi Fang,Striano Pasquale,Zara Federico,Helbig IngoORCID,Muona Mikko,Courage Carolina,Lehesjoki Anna-Elina,Berkovic Samuel FORCID,Fischbeck Kenneth H,Brancati Francesco,Morimoto Richard I,Wood Matthew JA,Rinaldi Carlo, ,

Abstract

AbstractThe vacuolar H+-ATPase is a large multi-subunit proton pump, composed of an integral membrane V0 domain, involved in proton translocation, and a peripheral V1 domain, catalysing ATP hydrolysis. This complex is widely distributed on the membrane of various subcellular organelles, such as endosomes and lysosomes, and plays a critical role in cellular processes ranging from autophagy to protein trafficking and endocytosis. Variants in ATP6V0A1, the brain-enriched isoform in the V0 domain, have been recently associated with developmental delay and epilepsy in four individuals. Here we identified 17 individuals from 14 unrelated families with both with new and previously characterised variants in this gene, representing the largest cohort to date. Five affected subjects with biallelic variants in this gene presented with a phenotype of early-onset progressive myoclonus epilepsy with ataxia, while 12 individuals carried de novo missense variants and showed severe developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. The R740Q mutation, which alone accounts for almost 50% of the mutations identified among our cases, leads to failure of lysosomal hydrolysis by directly impairing acidification of the endolysosomal compartment, causing autophagic dysfunction and severe developmental defect in C. elegans. Altogether, our findings further expand the neurological phenotype associated with variants in this gene and provide a direct link with endolysosomal acidification in the pathophysiology of ATP6V0A1-related conditions.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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