Clinical, Molecular, and Computational Analysis Showed a Novel Homozygous Mutation Among the Substrate-Binding Site of ARSA Protein in Consanguineous Family with Late-Infantile MLD.

Journal: Journal Of Molecular Neuroscience : MN
Published:
Abstract

Metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by progressive demyelination resulting from impaired degradation and thus the accumulation of cerebroside-3-sulfate (sulfatide). It is caused by the deficiency of arylsulfatase A (ARSA) enzyme which is encoded by the ARSA gene. The present study reports the clinical, molecular, and bioinformatic investigation of three patients belonging to a consanguineous family with late-infantile MLD disorder. The results revealed a novel homozygous missense mutation c.699C>A (p.His231Gln) in exon 4 of ARSA gene in the three patients inherited from their heterozygous parents. Interestingly, this novel mutation is the second mutation identified in the substrate-binding site of ARSA protein and it was classified as damaging and deleterious by several bioinformatics tools. The c.699C>A (p.His231Gln) leads to changes in the pre-mRNA secondary structure and in the ARSA protein 3D structure with a significant root mean square deviation value which could probably affect its stability and function.

Authors
Abir Issa, Fatma Feki, Marwa Jdila, Boudour Khabou, Bochra Rhouma, Leila Ammar Keskes, Chahnez Triki, Faiza Fakhfakh