Autosomal recessive spastic ataxia of Charlevoix-Saguenay caused by novel mutations in SACS gene: A report of two Chinese families.

Journal: Neuroscience Letters
Published:
Abstract

Autosomal recessive spastic ataxia of Charlevoix-Saguenay (ARSACS) is a rare hereditary disease characterized by cerebellar ataxia, pyramidal signs in lower limbs, and sensorimotor neuropathy. The disease is caused by bi-allelic mutations of the SACS gene encoding the sacsin protein. Over 200 mutations have been reported worldwide. Here, we report two unrelated Chinese ARSACS patients with novel mutations revealed by whole-exome sequencing (WES). One 36-year-old female patient exhibited classical ARSACS characteristics including cerebellar ataxia, pyramidal tract signs in the lower limbs and sensorimotor neuropathy, while the other 9-year-old male showed cerebellar ataxia and peripheral neuropathy. WES identified a compound heterozygous variant in the SACS gene (c.5692 G > T, p.E1898X; c.12673-12677 del TATCA, p.Y4225D fs*6) in the female patient and another compound heterozygous variant (c.1773C > A, p.S578X; c.8088-8089 in. CA, p.M2697Q fs*43) in the male patient. All of these novel mutations were predicted to be loss-of-function which affect the expression of the two important C-terminal domains (DnaJ and HEPN). These findings add new insights into the mutational and clinical spectrum of ARSACS.

Authors
Zhanjun Wang, Yang Song, Xianling Wang, Xuying Li, Fanxi Xu, Lianghao Si, Yue Dong, Tingyan Yao, Junge Zhu, Hong Lai, Wei Li, Feng Lin, Huapin Huang, Chaodong Wang