Clinical, neuropathological, and genetic characterization of STUB1 variants in cerebellar ataxias: a frequent cause of predominant cognitive impairment
- PMID: 32713943
- DOI: 10.1038/s41436-020-0899-x
Clinical, neuropathological, and genetic characterization of STUB1 variants in cerebellar ataxias: a frequent cause of predominant cognitive impairment
Erratum in
-
Correction: Clinical, neuropathological, and genetic characterization of STUB1 variants in cerebellar ataxias: a frequent cause of predominant cognitive impairment.Genet Med. 2021 Oct;23(10):2021. doi: 10.1038/s41436-020-01064-y. Genet Med. 2021. PMID: 33353973 No abstract available.
Abstract
Purpose: Pathogenic variants in STUB1 were initially described in autosomal recessive spinocerebellar ataxia type 16 and dominant cerebellar ataxia with cerebellar cognitive dysfunction (SCA48).
Methods: We analyzed a large series of 440 index cerebellar ataxia cases, mostly with dominant inheritance.
Results: STUB1 variants were detected in 50 patients. Age at onset and severity were remarkably variable. Cognitive impairment, predominantly frontal syndrome, was observed in 54% of STUB1 variant carriers, including five families with Huntington or frontotemporal dementia disease-like phenotypes associated with ataxia, while no STUB1 variant was found in 115 patients with frontotemporal dementia. We report neuropathological findings of a STUB1 heterozygous patient, showing massive loss of Purkinje cells in the vermis and major loss in the cerebellar hemispheres without atrophy of the pons, hippocampus, or cerebral cortex. This screening of STUB1 variants revealed new features: (1) the majority of patients were women (70%) and (2) "second hits" in AFG3L2, PRKCG, and TBP were detected in three families suggesting synergic effects.
Conclusion: Our results reveal an unexpectedly frequent (7%) implication of STUB1 among dominantly inherited cerebellar ataxias, and suggest that the penetrance of STUB1 variants could be modulated by other factors, including sex and variants in other ataxia-related genes.
Keywords: SCA48; SCAR16; STUB1; cognitive impairment; spinocerebellar ataxia.
Comment in
-
Correspondence on "Clinical, neuropathological, and genetic characterization of STUB1 variants in cerebellar ataxias: a frequent cause of predominant cognitive impairment" by Roux et al.Genet Med. 2021 Jun;23(6):1171-1172. doi: 10.1038/s41436-021-01104-1. Epub 2021 Feb 9. Genet Med. 2021. PMID: 33564152 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
-
Response to Park et al.Genet Med. 2021 Jun;23(6):1173-1174. doi: 10.1038/s41436-021-01105-0. Epub 2021 Feb 24. Genet Med. 2021. PMID: 33627829 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
References
-
- Shi Y, Wang J, Li J-D, et al. Identification of CHIP as a novel causative gene for autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxia. PLoS One. 2013;8:e81884. - DOI
-
- Shi C-H, Schisler JC, Rubel CE, et al. Ataxia and hypogonadism caused by the loss of ubiquitin ligase activity of the U box protein CHIP. Hum Mol Genet. 2014;23:1013–1024. - DOI
-
- Gazulla J, Izquierdo-Alvarez S, Sierra-Martínez E, Marta-Moreno ME, Alvarez S. Inaugural cognitive decline, late disease onset and novel STUB1 variants in SCAR16. Neurol Sci. 2018;39:2231–2233. - DOI
-
- Genis D, Ortega-Cubero S, San Nicolás H, et al. Heterozygous STUB1 mutation causes familial ataxia with cognitive affective syndrome (SCA48). Neurology. 2018;91:e1988. - DOI
-
- Schmahmann JD. The cerebellum and cognition. Neurosci Lett. 2019;688:62–75. - DOI
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources