UFM1 founder mutation in the Roma population causes recessive variant of H-ABC

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Abstract

Objective: To identify the gene defect in patients with hypomyelination with atrophy of the basal ganglia and cerebellum (H-ABC) who are negative for TUBB4A mutations. Methods: We performed homozygosity mapping and whole exome sequencing (WES) to detect the disease-causing variant. We used a Taqman assay for population screening.We developed a luciferase reporter construct to investigate the effect of the promoter mutation on expression. Results: Sixteen patients from 14 families from different countries fulfilling the MRI criteria for H-ABC exhibited a similar, severe clinical phenotype, including lack of development and a severe epileptic encephalopathy. The majority of patients had a known Roma ethnic background. Single nucleotide polymorphism array analysis in 5 patients identified one large overlapping homozygous region on chromosome 13. WES in 2 patients revealed a homozygous deletion in the promoter region of UFM1. Sanger sequencing confirmed homozygosity for this variant in all 16 patients. All patients shared a common haplotype, indicative of a founder effect. Screening of 1,000 controls from different European Roma panels demonstrated an overall carrier rate of the mutation of 3%-25%. Transfection assays showed that the deletion significantly reduced expression in specific CNS cell lines.

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Hamilton, E. M. C., Bertini, E., Kalaydjieva, L., Morar, B., Dojčáková, D., Liu, J., … Van Der Knaap, M. S. (2017). UFM1 founder mutation in the Roma population causes recessive variant of H-ABC. Neurology, 89(17), 1821–1828. https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000004578

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