AI Article Synopsis

  • TUBA1A tubulinopathy is a rare disorder linked to brain malformations and severe epilepsy, with a diverse range of symptoms observed in affected individuals.
  • A study involving ten patients from four European countries used MRI, protein analysis, and genetic modeling to assess the disorder and found varying degrees of developmental delays and motor impairments among the participants.
  • The research identified new genetic variants related to TUBA1A, improving the understanding of how these mutations affect the disease and providing insights into potential genotype-phenotype relationships.

Article Abstract

TUBA1A tubulinopathy is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder associated with brain malformations as well as early-onset and intractable epilepsy. As pathomechanisms and genotype-phenotype correlations are not completely understood, we aimed to provide further insights into the phenotypic and genetic spectrum. We here present a multicenter case series of ten unrelated individuals from four European countries using systematic MRI re-evaluation, protein structure analysis, and prediction score modeling. In two cases, pregnancy was terminated due to brain malformations. Amongst the eight living individuals, the phenotypic range showed various severity. Global developmental delay and severe motor impairment with tetraparesis was present in 63% and 50% of the subjects, respectively. Epilepsy was observed in 75% of the cases, which showed infantile onset in 83% and a refractory course in 50%. One individual presented a novel TUBA1A-associated electroclinical phenotype with evolvement from early myoclonic encephalopathy to continuous spike-and-wave during sleep. Neuroradiological features comprised a heterogeneous spectrum of cortical and extracortical malformations including rare findings such as cobblestone lissencephaly and subcortical band heterotopia. Two individuals developed hydrocephalus with subsequent posterior infarction. We report four novel and five previously published TUBA1A missense variants whose resulting amino acid substitutions likely affect longitudinal, lateral, and motor protein interactions as well as GTP binding. Assessment of pathogenic and benign variant distributions in synopsis with prediction scores revealed sections of variant enrichment and intolerance to missense variation. We here extend the clinical, neuroradiological, and genetic spectrum of TUBA1A tubulinopathy and provide insights into residue-specific pathomechanisms and genotype-phenotype correlations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8904761PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41431-021-01027-0DOI Listing

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