학술논문

Endocannabinoid dysfunction in neurological disease: neuro-ocular DAGLA-related syndrome (NODRS)
Document Type
article
Author
Bainbridge, Matthew NMazumder, AloranOgasawara, DaisukeJamra, Rami AbouBernard, GenevièveBertini, EnricoBurglen, LydieCope, HeidiCrawford, AliDerksen, AlexaDure, LeonGantz, EmilyKoch-Hogrebe, MargareteHurst, Anna CEMahida, SonalMarshall, PaigeMicalizzi, AlessiaNovelli, AntonioPeng, HongfanMedicine, Rady Children's Institute for GenomicRodriguez, DianaRobbins, Shira LRutledge, S LaneScalise, RobertaSchließke, SophiaShashi, VandanaSrivastava, SiddharthThiffault, IsabellaTopol, SarahAcosta, Maria TAdam, MargaretAdams, David RAlvey, JustinAmendola, LauraAndrews, AshleyAshley, Euan AAzamian, Mahshid SBacino, Carlos ABademci, GuneyBalasubramanyam, AshokBaldridge, DustinBale, JimBamshad, MichaelBarbouth, DeborahBayrak-Toydemir, PinarBeck, AnitaBeggs, Alan HBehrens, EdwardBejerano, GillBennet, JimmyBerg-Rood, BeverlyBernstein, Jonathan ABerry, Gerard TBican, AnnaBivona, StephanieBlue, ElizabethBohnsack, JohnBonner, DevonBotto, LorenzoBoyd, BrennaBriere, Lauren CBrokamp, EllyBrown, GabrielleBurke, Elizabeth ABurrage, Lindsay CButte, Manish JByers, PeterByrd, William ECarey, JohnCarrasquillo, OlveenCassini, ThomasChang, Ta Chen PeterChanprasert, SirisakChao, Hsiao-TuanClark, Gary DCoakley, Terra RCobban, Laurel ACogan, Joy DCoggins, MatthewCole, F SessionsColley, Heather ACooper, Cynthia MCraigen, William JCrouse, Andrew BCunningham, MichaelD’Souza, PrecillaDai, HongzhengDasari, SurendraDavis, JoieDayal, Jyoti GDeardorff, MatthewDell’Angelica, Esteban CDipple, KatrinaDoherty, DanielDorrani, NaghmehDoss, Argenia LDouine, Emilie DDuncan, LauraEarl, Dawn
Source
Brain. 145(10)
Subject
Biotechnology
Brain Disorders
Genetics
Neurosciences
Clinical Research
Rare Diseases
Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision
Pediatric
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Neurological
Humans
Child
Endocannabinoids
Phenotype
Nervous System Diseases
Heterozygote
Syndrome
Mutant Proteins
endocannabinoid
episodic ataxia
paroxysmal tonic upgaze
nystagmus
developmental delay
Rady Children's Institute for Genomic Medicine
Undiagnosed Disease Network
Medical and Health Sciences
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Language
Abstract
The endocannabinoid system is a highly conserved and ubiquitous signalling pathway with broad-ranging effects. Despite critical pathway functions, gene variants have not previously been conclusively linked to human disease. We identified nine children from eight families with heterozygous, de novo truncating variants in the last exon of DAGLA with a neuro-ocular phenotype characterized by developmental delay, ataxia and complex oculomotor abnormality. All children displayed paroxysms of nystagmus or eye deviation accompanied by compensatory head posture and worsened incoordination most frequently after waking. RNA sequencing showed clear expression of the truncated transcript and no differences were found between mutant and wild-type DAGLA activity. Immunofluorescence staining of patient-derived fibroblasts and HEK cells expressing the mutant protein showed distinct perinuclear aggregation not detected in control samples. This report establishes truncating variants in the last DAGLA exon as the cause of a unique paediatric syndrome. Because enzymatic activity was preserved, the observed mislocalization of the truncated protein may account for the observed phenotype. Potential mechanisms include DAGLA haploinsufficiency at the plasma membrane or dominant negative effect. To our knowledge, this is the first report directly linking an endocannabinoid system component with human genetic disease and sets the stage for potential future therapeutic avenues.