Neurobiology of Disease (Dec 2022)

Genetic analysis of and clinical characteristics associated with ANXA11 variants in a Chinese cohort with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

  • Qirui Jiang,
  • Junyu Lin,
  • Qianqian Wei,
  • Chunyu Li,
  • Yanbing Hou,
  • Bei Cao,
  • Lingyu Zhang,
  • Ruwei Ou,
  • Kuncheng Liu,
  • Tianmi Yang,
  • Yi Xiao,
  • Huifang Shang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 175
p. 105907

Abstract

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Background: Variants in the annexin A11 gene (ANXA11) have been reported to be associated with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). These variants may be involved in the pathogenesis of ALS by causing defects in intracellular protein trafficking. However, the genetic spectrum and clinical characteristics of ALS patients with ANXA11 variants are largely unknown. Methods: Genetic analysis was performed on 1587 Chinese patients with ALS. Eight software packages were used to predict the deleteriousness of missense variants. In addition, we searched PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science for relevant literature and meta-analysed variant frequencies. Results: In our ALS cohort, we identified 20 non-synonymous variants in 29 ALS patients, including one stop-gain, one frameshift, and 18 rare missense variants with seven predicted pathogenic variants. In a literature review of 11 reported studies that included 69 patients, 37 ANXA11 variants were reported, with a frequency of 1.7%, which was similar to that in our cohort (1.8%). Both our cohort and previous reports showed that ANXA11 carriers were more commonly males than females (12/17 vs. 19/31). Patients carrying ANXA11 variants affecting the C-terminal of the protein had earlier disease onset and shorter survival times than those carrying variants affecting the N-terminal. We found a relatively longer median survival time than that previously reported (53.6 months vs. 46.0 months). Additionally, Caucasian ANXA11 carriers were more likely to have cognitive impairment, typically frontotemporal dementia (FTD) than their Asian counterparts (20.0% vs. 14.3%). While more than half of the patients in our cohort had cognitive impairment, none had FTD. Conclusion: In our and previously published cases, ALS-associated ANXA11 variants predominantly affected the N- and C-terminal conserved domains. ANXA11 variant carriers are typically male and cognitively impaired. Our study extends the genotypic and phenotypic spectra of ALS patients with ANXA11 variants. Further expansion of the sample size is needed to analyse the clinical and non-motor symptom characteristics of patients and to deepen the understanding of the pathogenesis of ANXA11-associated ALS.

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