1. Academic Validation
  2. Mutations in the tail domain of DYNC1H1 cause dominant spinal muscular atrophy

Mutations in the tail domain of DYNC1H1 cause dominant spinal muscular atrophy

  • Neurology. 2012 May 29;78(22):1714-20. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e3182556c05.
M B Harms 1 K M Ori-McKenney M Scoto E P Tuck S Bell D Ma S Masi P Allred M Al-Lozi M M Reilly L J Miller A Jani-Acsadi A Pestronk M E Shy F Muntoni R B Vallee R H Baloh
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Neurology, Hope Center for Neurological Disease,Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA. [email protected]
Abstract

Objective: To identify the gene responsible for 14q32-linked dominant spinal muscular atrophy with lower extremity predominance (SMA-LED, OMIM 158600).

Methods: Target exon capture and next generation sequencing was used to analyze the 73 genes in the 14q32 linkage interval in 3 SMA-LED family members. Candidate gene sequencing in additional dominant SMA families used PCR and pooled target capture methods. Patient fibroblasts were biochemically analyzed.

Results: Regional exome sequencing of all candidate genes in the 14q32 interval in the original SMA-LED family identified only one missense mutation that segregated with disease state-a mutation in the tail domain of DYNC1H1 (I584L). Sequencing of DYNC1H1 in 32 additional probands with lower extremity predominant SMA found 2 additional heterozygous tail domain mutations (K671E and Y970C), confirming that multiple different mutations in the same domain can cause a similar phenotype. Biochemical analysis of dynein purified from patient-derived fibroblasts demonstrated that the I584L mutation dominantly disrupted dynein complex stability and function.

Conclusions: We demonstrate that mutations in the tail domain of the heavy chain of cytoplasmic dynein (DYNC1H1) cause spinal muscular atrophy and provide experimental evidence that a human DYNC1H1 mutation disrupts dynein complex assembly and function. DYNC1H1 mutations were recently found in a family with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (type 2O) and in a child with mental retardation. Both of these phenotypes show partial overlap with the spinal muscular atrophy patients described here, indicating that dynein dysfunction is associated with a range of phenotypes in humans involving neuronal development and maintenance.

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