Background: Neurological disorders comprise a large group of clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorders, many of which have a genetic cause. In addition to a detailed neurological examination, exome sequencing is being increasingly used as a complementary diagnostic tool to identify the underlying genetic cause in patients with unclear, supposedly genetically determined disorders.
Objective: To identify the genetic cause of a complex movement disorder in five consanguineous Pakistani families.
Methods: We included five consanguineous Pakistani families with complex recessively inherited movement disorders. Clinical investigation including videotaping was carried out in a total of 59 family members (4-21 per family) and MRI in six patients. Exome sequencing was performed in 4-5 family members per pedigree to explore the underlying genetic cause.
Results: Patients presented a wide spectrum of neurological symptoms including ataxia and/or dystonia. We identified three novel homozygous, segregating variants in ATCAY (p.Pro200Profs*20), MCOLN1 (p.Ile184Thr), and SACS (p.Asn3040Lysfs*4) in three of the families. Thus, we were able to identify the likely cause of the disease in a considerable number of families (60%) with the relatively simple and nowadays widely available method of exome sequencing. Of note, close collaboration of neurologists and geneticists was instrumental for proper data interpretation.
Conclusions: We expand the phenotypic, genotypic, and ethnical spectrum of mutations in these genes. Our findings alert neurologists that rare genetic causes should be considered in complex phenotypes regardless of ethnicity.
Keywords: Ataxia; Consanguineous; Dystonia; Exome sequencing; MRI; Recessive.
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