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SYNE1-related Autosomal Recessive Cerebellar Ataxia, Congenital Cerebellar Hypoplasia, and Cognitive Impairment
Author(s) -
L. Swan,
John Cardinal,
David Coman
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
clinics and practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2039-7283
DOI - 10.4081/cp.2018.1071
Subject(s) - cerebellar hypoplasia (non human) , medicine , genetics , spinocerebellar ataxia , cerebellar ataxia , spectrin , ataxia , pathology , disease , cerebellum , biology , endocrinology , cytoskeleton , psychiatry , cell
The spectrin repeat-containing nuclear envelope protein 1 () gene encodes a family of spectrin structural proteins that are associated with anchoring the plasma membrane to the actin cytoskeleton. -related disease is most commonly reported in autosomal recessive spinocerebellar ataxia 8, which demonstrates variable age of onset with a median of 30 years of age. However pathogenic mutations in are also causative of arthrogryposis multiplex congenital, a severe congenital neuromuscular condition. Here in we report monozygous twins with childhood onset ataxia, cerebellar hypoplasia, dysarthria, and cognitive impairment sharing two novel heterozygous mutations in the gene. Our family may expand the clinical phenotype associated with -related disease and offers possible genotype-phenotype correlations of a rare continuum of clinical disease phenotypes from neonatal to adult onset.

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