Medicine (Austin & Northern Health) - Research Publications

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    Inner Ear Morphology Is Perturbed in Two Novel Mouse Models of Recessive Deafness
    Miller, KA ; Williams, LH ; Rose, E ; Kuiper, M ; Dahl, H-HM ; Manji, SSM ; Li, T (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2012-12-12)
    Human MYO7A mutations can cause a variety of conditions involving the inner ear. These include dominant and recessive non-syndromic hearing loss and syndromic conditions such as Usher syndrome. Mouse models of deafness allow us to investigate functional pathways involved in normal and abnormal hearing processes. We present two novel mouse models with mutations in the Myo7a gene with distinct phenotypes. The mutation in Myo7a(I487N/I487N) ewaso is located within the head motor domain of Myo7a. Mice exhibit a profound hearing loss and manifest behaviour associated with a vestibular defect. A mutation located in the linker region between the coiled-coil and the first MyTH4 domains of the protein is responsible in Myo7a(F947I/F947I) dumbo. These mice show a less severe hearing loss than in Myo7a(I487N/I487N) ewaso; their hearing loss threshold is elevated at 4 weeks old, and progressively worsens with age. These mice show no obvious signs of vestibular dysfunction, although scanning electron microscopy reveals a mild phenotype in vestibular stereocilia bundles. The Myo7a(F947I/F947I) dumbo strain is therefore the first reported Myo7a mouse model without an overt vestibular phenotype; a possible model for human DFNB2 deafness. Understanding the molecular basis of these newly identified mutations will provide knowledge into the complex genetic pathways involved in the maintenance of hearing, and will provide insight into recessively inherited sensorineural hearing loss in humans.
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    Early onset absence epilepsy: 1 in 10 cases is caused by GLUT1 deficiency
    Arsov, T ; Mullen, SA ; Damiano, JA ; Lawrence, KM ; Huh, LL ; Nolan, M ; Young, H ; Thouin, A ; Dahl, H-HM ; Berkovic, SF ; Crompton, DE ; Sadleir, LG ; Scheffer, IE (WILEY-BLACKWELL, 2012-12)
    Glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1) deficiency caused by mutations of SLC2A1 is an increasingly recognized cause of genetic generalized epilepsy. We previously reported that >10% (4 of 34) of a cohort with early onset absence epilepsy (EOAE) had GLUT1 deficiency. This study uses a new cohort of 55 patients with EOAE to confirm that finding. Patients with typical absence seizures beginning before 4 years of age were screened for solute carrier family 2 (facilitated glucose transporter), member 1 (SLC2A1) mutations or deletions. All had generalized spike-waves on electroencephalography (EEG). Those with tonic and/or atonic seizures were excluded. Mutations were found in 7 (13%) of 55 cases, including five missense mutations, an in-frame deletion leading to loss of a single amino acid, and a deletion spanning two exons. Over both studies, 11 (12%) of 89 probands with EOAE have GLUT1 deficiency. Given the major treatment and genetic counseling implications, this study confirms that SLC2A1 mutational analysis should be strongly considered in EOAE.
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    Strikingly Different Clinicopathological Phenotypes Determined by Progranulin-Mutation Dosage
    Smith, KR ; Damiano, J ; Franceschetti, S ; Carpenter, S ; Canafoglia, L ; Morbin, M ; Rossi, G ; Pareyson, D ; Mole, SE ; Staropoli, JF ; Sims, KB ; Lewis, J ; Lin, W-L ; Dickson, DW ; Dahl, H-H ; Bahlo, M ; Berkovic, SF (CELL PRESS, 2012-06-08)
    We performed hypothesis-free linkage analysis and exome sequencing in a family with two siblings who had neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL). Two linkage peaks with maximum LOD scores of 3.07 and 2.97 were found on chromosomes 7 and 17, respectively. Unexpectedly, we found these siblings to be homozygous for a c.813_816del (p.Thr272Serfs∗10) mutation in the progranulin gene (GRN, granulin precursor) in the latter peak. Heterozygous mutations in GRN are a major cause of frontotemporal lobar degeneration with TDP-43 inclusions (FTLD-TDP), the second most common early-onset dementia. Reexamination of progranulin-deficient mice revealed rectilinear profiles typical of NCL. The age-at-onset and neuropathology of FTLD-TDP and NCL are markedly different. Our findings reveal an unanticipated link between a rare and a common neurological disorder and illustrate pleiotropic effects of a mutation in the heterozygous or homozygous states.