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The Expanding Phenotypical Spectrum of WARS2-Related Disorder: Four Novel Cases with a Common Recurrent Variant

Biallelic variants in the mitochondrial form of the tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetases (WARS2) can cause a neurodevelopmental disorder with movement disorders including early-onset tremor–parkinsonism syndrome. Here, we describe four new patients, who all presented at a young age with a tremor–parkinsoni...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pauly, Martje G., Korenke, G. Christoph, Diaw, Sokhna Haissatou, Grözinger, Anne, Cazurro-Gutiérrez, Ana, Pérez-Dueñas, Belén, González, Victoria, Macaya, Alfons, Serrano Antón, Ana Teresa, Peterlin, Borut, Božović, Ivana Babić, Maver, Aleš, Münchau, Alexander, Lohmann, Katja
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10137540/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37107582
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes14040822
Descripción
Sumario:Biallelic variants in the mitochondrial form of the tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetases (WARS2) can cause a neurodevelopmental disorder with movement disorders including early-onset tremor–parkinsonism syndrome. Here, we describe four new patients, who all presented at a young age with a tremor–parkinsonism syndrome and responded well to levodopa. All patients carry the same recurrent, hypomorphic missense variant (NM_015836.4: c.37T>G; p.Trp13Gly) either together with a previously described truncating variant (NM_015836.4: c.797Cdel; p.Pro266ArgfsTer10), a novel truncating variant (NM_015836.4: c.346C>T; p.Gln116Ter), a novel canonical splice site variant (NM_015836.4: c.349-1G>A), or a novel missense variant (NM_015836.4: c.475A>C, p.Thr159Pro). We investigated the mitochondrial function in patients and found increased levels of mitochondrially encoded cytochrome C Oxidase II as part of the mitochondrial respiratory chain as well as decreased mitochondrial integrity and branching. Finally, we conducted a literature review and here summarize the broad phenotypical spectrum of reported WARS2-related disorders. In conclusion, WARS2-related disorders are diagnostically challenging diseases due to the broad phenotypic spectrum and the disease relevance of a relatively common missense change that is often filtered out in a diagnostic setting since it occurs in ~0.5% of the general European population.