The clinical and genetic spectrum of autosomal-recessive TOR1A-related disorders

(2023) The clinical and genetic spectrum of autosomal-recessive TOR1A-related disorders. Brain. pp. 3273-3288. ISSN 0006-8950

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Abstract

In this cross-sectional analysis, Saffari et al. systematically assess the clinical, radiological, and molecular characteristics of 56 individuals with autosomal-recessive TOR1A-related disease. They delineate a broad and variable phenotypic spectrum, define core clinical symptoms, and highlight predictors for disease severity and survival. In the field of rare diseases, progress in molecular diagnostics led to the recognition that variants linked to autosomal-dominant neurodegenerative diseases of later onset can, in the context of biallelic inheritance, cause devastating neurodevelopmental disorders and infantile or childhood-onset neurodegeneration. TOR1A-associated arthrogryposis multiplex congenita 5 (AMC5) is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder arising from biallelic variants in TOR1A, a gene that in the heterozygous state is associated with torsion dystonia-1 (DYT1 or DYT-TOR1A), an early-onset dystonia with reduced penetrance. While 15 individuals with AMC5-TOR1A have been reported (less than 10 in detail), a systematic investigation of the full disease-associated spectrum has not been conducted. Here, we assess the clinical, radiological and molecular characteristics of 57 individuals from 40 families with biallelic variants in TOR1A. Median age at last follow-up was 3 years (0-24 years). Most individuals presented with severe congenital flexion contractures (95) and variable developmental delay (79). Motor symptoms were reported in 79 and included lower limb spasticity and pyramidal signs, as well as gait disturbances. Facial dysmorphism was an integral part of the phenotype, with key features being a broad/full nasal tip, narrowing of the forehead and full cheeks. Analysis of disease-associated manifestations delineated a phenotypic spectrum ranging from normal cognition and mild gait disturbance to congenital arthrogryposis, global developmental delay, intellectual disability, absent speech and inability to walk. In a subset, the presentation was consistent with foetal akinesia deformation sequence with severe intrauterine abnormalities. Survival was 71, with higher mortality in males. Death occurred at a median age of 1.2 months (1 week-9 years), due to respiratory failure, cardiac arrest or sepsis. Analysis of brain MRI studies identified non-specific neuroimaging features, including a hypoplastic corpus callosum (72), foci of signal abnormality in the subcortical and periventricular white matter (55), diffuse white matter volume loss (45), mega cisterna magna (36) and arachnoid cysts (27). The molecular spectrum included 22 distinct variants, defining a mutational hotspot in the C-terminal domain of the Torsin-1A protein. Genotype-phenotype analysis revealed an association of missense variants in the 3-helix bundle domain to an attenuated phenotype, while missense variants near the Walker A/B motif as well as biallelic truncating variants were linked to early death. In summary, this systematic cross-sectional analysis of a large cohort of individuals with biallelic TOR1A variants across a wide age-range delineates the clinical and genetic spectrum of TOR1A-related autosomal-recessive disease and highlights potential predictors for disease severity and survival.

Item Type: Article
Keywords: AMC5 arthrogryposis multiplex congenita 5 biallelic variation NDD Torsin-1A dystonia torsina arthrogryposis phenotype movement Neurosciences & Neurology
Page Range: pp. 3273-3288
Journal or Publication Title: Brain
Journal Index: ISI
Volume: 146
Number: 8
Identification Number: https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awad039
ISSN: 0006-8950
Depositing User: خانم ناهید ضیائی
URI: http://eprints.mui.ac.ir/id/eprint/26560

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