Human Genomics (Mar 2023)

Mutation screening of SPTLC1 and SPTLC2 in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

  • Chunyu Li,
  • Yanbing Hou,
  • Qianqian Wei,
  • Junyu Lin,
  • Zheng Jiang,
  • Qirui Jiang,
  • Tianmi Yang,
  • Yi Xiao,
  • Jingxuan Huang,
  • Yangfan Cheng,
  • Ruwei Ou,
  • Kuncheng Liu,
  • Xueping Chen,
  • Wei Song,
  • Bi Zhao,
  • Ying Wu,
  • Bei Cao,
  • Yongping Chen,
  • Huifang Shang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40246-023-00479-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Background Recently, several rare variants of SPTLC1 were identified as disease cause for juvenile amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) by disrupting the normal homeostatic regulation of serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT). However, further exploration of the rare variants in large cohorts was still necessary. Meanwhile, SPTLC2 plays a similar role as SPTLC1 in the SPT function. Methods To explore the genetic role of SPTLC1 and SPTLC2 in ALS, we analyzed the rare protein-coding variants in 2011 patients with ALS and 3298 controls from the Chinese population with whole exome sequencing. Fisher’s exact test was performed between each variant and disease risk, while at gene level over-representation of rare variants in patients was examined with optimized sequence kernel association test (SKAT-O). Results Totally 33 rare variants with minor allele frequency < 0.01 were identified, including 17 in SPTLC1 and 16 in SPTLC2. One adult-onset patient carried the variant p.E406K (SPTLC1) which was reported in previous study. Additionally, three adult-onset patients carried variants in the same amino acids as the variants identified in previous studies (p.Y509C, p.S331T, and p.R239Q in SPTLC1). At gene level, rare variants of SPTLC1 and STPLC2 were not enriched in patients. Conclusion These results broadened the variant spectrum of SPTLC1 and SPTLC2 in ALS, and paved the way for future research. Further replication was still needed to explore the genetic role of SPTLC1 in ALS.

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