The aetiology of dystonia disorders is complex, and next-generation sequencing has become a useful tool in elucidating the variable genetic background of these diseases. Here we report a deleterious heterozygous truncating variant in the inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase gene (IMPDH2) by whole-exome sequencing, co-segregating with a dominantly inherited dystonia-tremor disease in a large Finnish family. We show that the defect results in degradation of the gene product, causing IMPDH2 deficiency in patient cells. IMPDH2 is the first and rate-limiting enzyme in the de novo biosynthesis of guanine nucleotides, a dopamine synthetic pathway previously linked to childhood or adolescence-onset dystonia disorders. We report IMPDH2 as a new gene to the dystonia disease entity. The evidence underlines the important link between guanine metabolism, dopamine biosynthesis and dystonia.
CITATION STYLE
Kuukasjärvi, A., Landoni, J. C., Kaukonen, J., Juhakoski, M., Auranen, M., Torkkeli, T., … Suomalainen, A. (2021). IMPDH2: a new gene associated with dominant juvenile-onset dystonia-tremor disorder. European Journal of Human Genetics, 29(12), 1833–1837. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41431-021-00939-1
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