학술논문

Confirmation of TACO1as a Leigh Syndrome Disease Gene in Two Additional Families
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Neuromuscular Diseases; June 2020, Vol. 7 Issue: 3 p301-308, 8p
Subject
Language
ISSN
22143599; 22143602
Abstract
In 2009, we identified TACO1as a novel mitochondrial disease gene in a single family, however no second family has been described to confirm the role of TACO1in mitochondrial disease. In this report, we describe two independent consanguineous families carrying pathogenic variants in TACO1, confirming the phenotype. Detailed clinical investigations and whole exome sequencing with haplotype analysis have been performed in several members of the two reported families. Clinical phenotype of the patients confirms the originally reported phenotype of a childhood-onset progressive cerebellar and pyramidal syndrome with optic atrophy and learning difficulties. Brain MRI showed periventricular white matter lesions with multiple cystic defects, suggesting leukoencephalopathy in both patients. One patient carried the previously described homozygous TACO1variant (p.His158ProfsTer8) and haplotype analysis suggested that this variant is a rare founder mutation. The second patient from another family carried a homozygous novel frame shift variant (p.Cys85PhefsTer15). The identification of two Turkish families with similar characteristic clinical presentation and an additional homozygous nonsense mutation confirms that TACO1is a human mitochondrial disease gene. Although most patients with this clinical presentation undergo next generation sequencing analysis, screening for selected founder mutations in the Turkish population based on the precise clinical presentation may reduce time and cost of finding the genetic diagnosis even in the era of massively parallel sequencing.