Frontiers in Neuroscience (Jan 2024)

A pathogenic variant in the FLCN gene presenting with pure dementia: is autophagy at the intersection between neurodegeneration and cancer?

  • Irene Bottillo,
  • Luigi Laino,
  • Alessia Azzarà,
  • Carla Lintas,
  • Ilaria Cassano,
  • Vincenzo Di Lazzaro,
  • Vincenzo Di Lazzaro,
  • Francesca Ursini,
  • Francesco Motolese,
  • Francesco Motolese,
  • Simone Bargiacchi,
  • Daniela Formicola,
  • Paola Grammatico,
  • Fiorella Gurrieri,
  • Fiorella Gurrieri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2023.1304080
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17

Abstract

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IntroductionFolliculin, encoded by FLCN gene, plays a role in the mTORC1 autophagy cascade and its alterations are responsible for the Birt–Hogg–Dubé (BHD) syndrome, characterized by follicle hamartomas, kidney tumors and pneumothorax.Patient and resultsWe report a 74-years-old woman diagnosed with dementia and carrying a FLCN alteration in absence of any sign of BHD. She also carried an alteration of MAT1A gene, which is also implicated in the regulation of mTORC1.DiscussionThe MAT1A variant could have prevented the development of a FLCN-related oncological phenotype. Conversely, our patient presented with dementia that, to date, has yet to be documented in BHD. Folliculin belongs to the DENN family proteins, which includes C9orf72 whose alteration has been associated to neurodegeneration. The folliculin perturbation could affect the C9orf72 activity and our patient could represent the first human model of a relationship between FLCN and C9orf72 across the path of autophagy.

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