International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jan 2023)

Not to Miss: Intronic Variants, Treatment, and Review of the Phenotypic Spectrum in <i>VPS13D</i>-Related Disorder

  • Martje G. Pauly,
  • Norbert Brüggemann,
  • Stephanie Efthymiou,
  • Anne Grözinger,
  • Sokhna Haissatou Diaw,
  • Viorica Chelban,
  • Valentina Turchetti,
  • Barbara Vona,
  • Vera Tadic,
  • Henry Houlden,
  • Alexander Münchau,
  • Katja Lohmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24031874
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 3
p. 1874

Abstract

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VPS13D is one of four human homologs of the vacuolar sorting protein 13 gene (VPS13). Biallelic pathogenic variants in the gene are associated with spastic ataxia or spastic paraplegia. Here, we report two patients with intronic pathogenic variants: one patient with early onset severe spastic ataxia and debilitating tremor, which is compound-heterozygous for a canonical (NM_018156.4: c.2237−1G > A) and a non-canonical (NM_018156.4: c.941+3G>A) splice site variant. The second patient carries the same non-canonical splice site variant in the homozygous state and is affected by late-onset spastic paraplegia. We confirmed altered splicing as a result of the intronic variants and demonstrated disturbed mitochondrial integrity. Notably, tremor in the first patient improved significantly by bilateral deep brain stimulation (DBS) in the ventralis intermedius (VIM) nucleus of the thalamus. We also conducted a literature review and summarized the phenotypical spectrum of reported VPS13D-related disorders. Our study underscores that looking for mutations outside the canonical splice sites is important not to miss a genetic diagnosis, especially in disorders with a highly heterogeneous presentation without specific red flags.

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