1. Academic Validation
  2. Mutations in LONP1, a mitochondrial matrix protease, cause CODAS syndrome

Mutations in LONP1, a mitochondrial matrix protease, cause CODAS syndrome

  • Am J Med Genet A. 2015 Jul;167(7):1501-9. doi: 10.1002/ajmg.a.37029.
Esra Dikoglu 1 Ali Alfaiz 2 3 Maria Gorna 4 Deborah Bertola 5 Jong Hee Chae 6 Tae-Joon Cho 6 Murat Derbent 7 Yasemin Alanay 8 Tulay Guran 9 Ok-Hwa Kim 10 Juan C Llerenar Jr 11 Guillerme Yamamoto 5 Giulio Superti-Furga 4 Alexandre Reymond 2 Ioannis Xenarios 3 Brian Stevenson 3 Belinda Campos-Xavier 1 Luisa Bonafé 1 Andrea Superti-Furga 12 Sheila Unger 13
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Centre des Maladies Moléculaires CHUV, University of Lausanne, Switzerland.
  • 2 Center for Integrative Genomics (CIG), University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
  • 3 Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, Lausanne, Switzerland.
  • 4 Research Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna, Austria.
  • 5 Genetics Unit, Instituto da Criança, HC/FMUSP, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
  • 6 Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Seoul National Univ Children's Hospital, Seoul, South Korea.
  • 7 Pediatric Genetics Unit, Department of Pediatrics, Başkent University Faculty of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey.
  • 8 Pediatric Genetics, Department of Pediatrics, Acibadem University School of Medicine, Istanbul, Turkey.
  • 9 Division of Pediatric Endocrinology, Department of Pediatrics, Marmara University Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey.
  • 10 Radiology, Woorisoa Children's Hospital, Seoul, Korea.
  • 11 Centro de Genética Médica, Instituto Fernandes Fugueira/Fiocruz, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
  • 12 Department of Pediatrics, CHUV, University of Lausanne, Switzerland.
  • 13 Medical Genetics Service, CHUV, University of Lausanne, Switzerland.
Abstract

Cerebral, ocular, dental, auricular, skeletal anomalies (CODAS) syndrome (MIM 600373) was first described and named by Shehib et al, in 1991 in a single patient. The anomalies referred to in the acronym are as follows: cerebral-developmental delay, ocular-cataracts, dental-aberrant cusp morphology and delayed eruption, auricular-malformations of the external ear, and skeletal-spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia. This distinctive constellation of anatomical findings should allow easy recognition but despite this only four apparently sporadic patients have been reported in the last 20 years indicating that the full phenotype is indeed very rare with perhaps milder or a typical presentations that are allelic but without sufficient phenotypic resemblance to permit clinical diagnosis. We performed exome sequencing in three patients (an isolated case and a brother and sister sib pair) with classical features of CODAS. Sanger sequencing was used to confirm results as well as for mutation discovery in a further four unrelated patients ascertained via their skeletal features. Compound heterozygous or homozygous mutations in LONP1 were found in all (8 separate mutations; 6 missense, 1 nonsense, 1 small in-frame deletion) thus establishing the genetic basis of CODAS and the pattern of inheritance (autosomal recessive). LONP1 encodes an Enzyme of Bacterial ancestry that participates in protein turnover within the mitochondrial matrix. The mutations cluster at the ATP-binding and proteolytic domains of the Enzyme. Biallelic inheritance and clustering of mutations confirm dysfunction of LONP1 activity as the molecular basis of CODAS but the pathogenesis remains to be explored.

Keywords

CODAS; LONP1; cataract; mitochondrial protease; skeletal dysplasia.

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