A novel mutation of AFG3L2 might cause dominant optic atrophy in patients with mild intellectual disability

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Abstract

Dominant optic neuropathies causing fiber loss in the optic nerve are among the most frequent inherited mitochondrial diseases. In most genetically resolved cases, the disease is associated to a mutation in OPA1, which encodes an inner mitochondrial dynamin involved in network fusion, cristae structure and mitochondrial genome maintenance. OPA1 cleavage is regulated by two m-AAA proteases, SPG7 and AFG3L2, which are, respectively involved in Spastic Paraplegia 7 and Spino-Cerebellar Ataxia 28. Here, we identified a novel mutation c.1402C > T in AFG3L2, modifying the arginine 468 in cysteine in an evolutionary highly conserved arginine-finger motif, in a family with optic atrophy and mild intellectual disability. Ophthalmic examinations disclosed a loss of retinal nerve fibers on the temporal and nasal sides of the optic disk and a red-green dyschromatopsia. Thus, our results suggest that neuro-ophthalmological symptom as optic atrophy might be associated with AFG3L2 mutations, and should prompt the screening of this gene in patients with isolated and syndromic inherited optic neuropathies.

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Charif, M., Roubertie, A., Salime, S., Mamouni, S., Goizet, C., Hamel, C. P., & Lenaers, G. (2015). A novel mutation of AFG3L2 might cause dominant optic atrophy in patients with mild intellectual disability. Frontiers in Genetics, 6(OCT). https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2015.00311

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