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Bi-allelic HPDL Variants Cause a Neurodegenerative Disease Ranging from Neonatal Encephalopathy to Adolescent-Onset Spastic Paraplegia
Author(s) -
Ralf A. Husain,
Mona Grimmel,
Matias Wagner,
J. Christopher Hennings,
Christian Marx,
René G. Feichtinger,
Abdelkrim Saadi,
Kevin Rostásy,
Florentine Radelfahr,
Andrea Bevot,
Marion DöblerNeumann,
Hans Hartmann,
Laurence Colleaux,
Isabell Cordts,
Xenia Kobeleva,
Hossein Darvish,
Somayeh Bakhtiari,
Michael C. Kruer,
Arnaud Besse,
Andy CheukHim Ng,
Diana Chiang,
François V. Bolduc,
Abbas Tafakhori,
Shrikant Mane,
Saghar Ghasemi Firouzabadi,
Antje K. Huebner,
Rebecca Buchert,
Stefanie BeckWoedl,
Amelie J. Müller,
Lucia Laugwitz,
Thomas Nägele,
ZhaoQi Wang,
Tim M. Strom,
Marc Sturm,
Thomas Meitinger,
Thomas Klockgether,
Olaf Rieß,
Thomas Klopstock,
Ulrich Brandl,
Christian A. Hübner,
Marcus Deschauer,
Johannes A. Mayr,
Penelope E. Bonnen,
Ingeborg KrägelohMann,
Saskia B. Wortmann,
Tobias B. Haack
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the american journal of human genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.661
H-Index - 302
eISSN - 1537-6605
pISSN - 0002-9297
DOI - 10.1016/j.ajhg.2020.06.015
Subject(s) - medicine , spastic , paraplegia , allele , hereditary spastic paraplegia , encephalopathy , disease , cerebral palsy , pediatrics , biology , genetics , physical therapy , psychiatry , phenotype , gene , spinal cord
We report bi-allelic pathogenic HPDL variants as a cause of a progressive, pediatric-onset spastic movement disorder with variable clinical presentation. The single-exon gene HPDL encodes a protein of unknown function with sequence similarity to 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase. Exome sequencing studies in 13 families revealed bi-allelic HPDL variants in each of the 17 individuals affected with this clinically heterogeneous autosomal-recessive neurological disorder. HPDL levels were significantly reduced in fibroblast cell lines derived from more severely affected individuals, indicating the identified HPDL variants resulted in the loss of HPDL protein. Clinical presentation ranged from severe, neonatal-onset neurodevelopmental delay with neuroimaging findings resembling mitochondrial encephalopathy to milder manifestation of adolescent-onset, isolated hereditary spastic paraplegia. All affected individuals developed spasticity predominantly of the lower limbs over the course of the disease. We demonstrated through bioinformatic and cellular studies that HPDL has a mitochondrial localization signal and consequently localizes to mitochondria suggesting a putative role in mitochondrial metabolism. Taken together, these genetic, bioinformatic, and functional studies demonstrate HPDL is a mitochondrial protein, the loss of which causes a clinically variable form of pediatric-onset spastic movement disorder.

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