A clinical, genetic and candidate gene study of Silver syndrome, a complicated form of hereditary spastic paraplegia
- PMID: 15372247
- DOI: 10.1007/s00415-004-0401-8
A clinical, genetic and candidate gene study of Silver syndrome, a complicated form of hereditary spastic paraplegia
Abstract
Silver syndrome (SS) is a complicated form of hereditary spastic paraplegia associated with distal wasting of the small muscles of the hands. We have previously described a large kindred with SS and mapped a genetic locus (SPG17) to chromosome 11q12-q14. In the current study we analyse the clinical phenotype and perform linkage analysis in three new SS families. In addition we analyse candidate genes mapping to the SS locus (SPG17). Clinical assessments were performed on 25 (15 affected) individuals from each family in which SS segregates with variable clinical expression. Neurophysiological studies, performed in the index case of two families, suggested anterior horn cell or nerve root involvement. Linkage analysis using microsatellite markers mapping to the SPG17 locus was performed and only one of the three families had a microsatellite segregation pattern compatible with linkage. Candidate genes mapping to the SS critical region were analysed in this and one other SPG17-linked family. Mutation analysis of genes encoding calpain 1 ( CAPN1), copper chaperone for superoxide dismutase ( CCS), ADP ribosylation factor-like 2 ( ARL2), LOC120664, a putative homologue of atlastin ( ATLSTL-1) and sorting nexin 15 ( SNX15) failed to identify any disease-specific mutations. SS therefore exhibits both clinical and genetic heterogeneity and the SPG17 locus may account for a significant proportion of SS mutations in the UK.
Similar articles
-
The Silver syndrome variant of hereditary spastic paraplegia maps to chromosome 11q12-q14, with evidence for genetic heterogeneity within this subtype.Am J Hum Genet. 2001 Jul;69(1):209-15. doi: 10.1086/321267. Epub 2001 May 25. Am J Hum Genet. 2001. PMID: 11389484 Free PMC article.
-
ALS and MMN mimics in patients with BSCL2 mutations: the expanding clinical spectrum of SPG17 hereditary spastic paraplegia.J Neurol. 2017 Jan;264(1):11-20. doi: 10.1007/s00415-016-8301-2. Epub 2016 Oct 13. J Neurol. 2017. PMID: 27738760
-
X linked spastic paraplegia (SPG2): clinical heterogeneity at a single gene locus.J Med Genet. 1993 May;30(5):381-4. doi: 10.1136/jmg.30.5.381. J Med Genet. 1993. PMID: 8320699 Free PMC article.
-
Co-segregation of Huntington disease and hereditary spastic paraplegia in 4 generations.Neurologist. 2011 Jul;17(4):211-2. doi: 10.1097/NRL.0b013e3182173567. Neurologist. 2011. PMID: 21712667
-
[Progressive spastic paraparesis and static syringomyelia: Silver syndrome/SPG17].Rev Neurol. 2015 Aug 16;61(4):188-91. Rev Neurol. 2015. PMID: 26204091 Review. Spanish. No abstract available.
Cited by
-
Swimming in Deep Water: Zebrafish Modeling of Complicated Forms of Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia and Spastic Ataxia.Front Neurosci. 2019 Dec 10;13:1311. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2019.01311. eCollection 2019. Front Neurosci. 2019. PMID: 31920481 Free PMC article.
References
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Miscellaneous