AI Article Synopsis

  • CLCC1 was identified as a novel gene related to ALS, prompting a study to investigate its variants in a cohort of 1005 ALS patients and 1224 healthy controls.
  • Four rare missense variants in CLCC1 were found in unrelated sporadic ALS patients, predicted to be pathogenic and linked to specific clinical features such as earlier onset and rapid disease progression.
  • Although these findings further the understanding of CLCC1-related ALS, statistical analysis did not show a significant association of the gene variants with ALS risk, indicating that more research is needed.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Recently, chloride channel CLIC-like 1 (CLCC1) was reported to be a novel ALS-related gene. We aimed to screen CLCC1 variants in our ALS cohort and further explore the genotype-phenotype correlation of CLCC1-related ALS.

Methods: We screened rare damaging variants in CLCC1 from our cohorts of 1005 ALS patients and 1224 healthy controls with whole-exome sequencing in Central South China. Fisher's exact test was conducted for association analysis at the entire gene level and single variant level.

Results: In total, four heterozygous missense variants in CLCC1 were identified from four unrelated sporadic ALS patients and predicted to be putative pathogenic by in silico tools and protein model prediction, accounting for 0.40% of all patients (4/1005). The four variants were c.A275C (p.Q92P), c.G1139A (p.R380K), c.C1244T (p.T415M), and c.G1328A (p.R443Q), respectively, which had not been reported in ALS patients previously. Three of four variants were located in exon 10. Patients harboring CLCC1 variants seemed to share a group of similar clinical features, including earlier age at onset, rapid progression, spinal onset, and vulnerable cognitive status. Statistically, we did not find CLCC1 to be associated with the risk of ALS at the entire gene level or single variant level.

Conclusion: Our findings further expanded the genetic and clinical spectrum of CLCC1-related ALS and provided more genetic evidence for anion channel involvement in the pathogenesis of ALS, but further investigations are needed to verify our findings.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10791024PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/acn3.51934DOI Listing

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