Novel loss-of-function variants expand ABCC9-related intellectual disability and myopathy syndrome
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34475Date
2024-01-13Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Efthymiou, Stephanie; Scala, Marcello; Nagaraj, Vini; Ochenkowska, Katarzyna; Komdeur, Fenne L; Liang, Robin Amanda; Abdel-Hamid, Mohamed S; Sultan, Tipu; Barøy, Tuva; Van Ghelue, Marijke; Vona, Barbara; Maroofian, Reza; Zafar, Faisal; Alkuraya, Fowzan S; Zaki, Maha S; Severino, Mariasavina; Duru, Kingsley C; Tryon, Robert C; Brauteset, Lin; Ansari, Morad; Hamilton, Mark; Van Haelst, Mieke M; Van Haaften, Gijs; Zara, Federico; Houlden, Henry; Samarut, Éric; Nichols, Colin G; Smeland, Marie Louise Falkenberg; McClenaghan, ConorAbstract
All variants are predicted to result in severe truncations or in-frame deletions within SUR2, leading to the generation of non-functional SUR2-dependent KATP channels. Affected individuals show psychomotor delay and intellectual disability of variable severity, microcephaly, corpus callosum and white matter abnormalities, seizures, spasticity, short stature, muscle fatigability and weakness. Heterozygous parents do not show any conserved clinical pathology but report multiple incidences of intra-uterine fetal death, which were also observed in an eighth family included in this study. In vivo studies of abcc9 loss-of-function in zebrafish revealed an exacerbated motor response to pentylenetetrazole, a pro-convulsive drug, consistent with impaired neurodevelopment associated with an increased seizure susceptibility.
Our findings define an ABCC9 loss-of-function-related phenotype, expanding the genotypic and phenotypic spectrum of AIMS and reveal novel human pathologies arising from KATP channel dysfunction.