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1.
Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth disease (CMT) comprises a group of heterogeneous peripheral axonopathies affecting 1 in 2,500 individuals. As mutations in several genes cause axonal degeneration in CMT type 2, mutations in mitofusin 2 (MFN2) account for approximately 90% of the most severe cases, making it the most common cause of inherited peripheral axonal degeneration. MFN2 is an integral mitochondrial outer membrane protein that plays a major role in mitochondrial fusion and motility; yet the mechanism by which dominant mutations in this protein lead to neurodegeneration is still not fully understood. Furthermore, future pre‐clinical drug trials will be in need of validated rodent models. We have generated a Mfn2 knock‐in mouse model expressing Mfn2R94W, which was originally identified in CMT patients. We have performed behavioral, morphological, and biochemical studies to investigate the consequences of this mutation. Homozygous inheritance leads to premature death at P1, as well as mitochondrial dysfunction, including increased mitochondrial fragmentation in mouse embryonic fibroblasts and decreased ATP levels in newborn brains. Mfn2R94W heterozygous mice show histopathology and age‐dependent open‐field test abnormalities, which support a mild peripheral neuropathy. Although behavior does not mimic the severity of the human disease phenotype, this mouse can provide useful tissues for studying molecular pathways associated with MFN2 point mutations.  相似文献   

2.
Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth (CMT) syndromes are a group of clinically heterogeneous disorders of the peripheral nervous system. Mutations of mitofusin 2 (MFN2) have been recognized to be associated with CMT type 2A (CMT2A). CMT2A is primarily an axonal disorder resulting in motor and sensory neuropathy. We report a male child with psychomotor delay, dysmorphic features, and weakness of lower limbs associated with electrophysiological features of severe, sensory‐motor, axonal neuropathy. The patient was diagnosed with early onset CMT2A and severe psychomotor retardation associated with c.310C>T mutation (p.R104W) in MFN2 gene. CMT2A should be considered in patients with both axonal sensory‐motor neuropathy and developmental delay.  相似文献   

3.
Introduction: In this study we compare the ultrasound features in the median nerve in patients with different types of Charcot–Marie–Tooth (CMT) disease and hereditary neuropathies with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP) as a typical entrapment neuropathy. Methods: Median nerve ultrasound and conduction studies were performed in patients with CMT1A (n = 12), MFN2‐associated CMT2A (n = 7), CMTX (n = 5), and HNPP (n = 5), and in controls (n = 28). Results: Median nerve cross‐sectional area (CSA) was significantly increased in CMT1A, whereas, in axonal CMT2A, fascicle diameter (FD) was enlarged. CSA correlated with nerve conduction slowing in CMT1A and with axonal loss, as shown by motor and sensory nerve amplitudes in both CMT1A and CMT2A. A relatively low wrist‐to‐forearm‐ratio (WFR <0.8) or a relatively high WFR (>1.8) appeared to be unlikely in MFN2 and Cx32 mutations of CMT2A and CMTX, respectively. Conclusion: Differences in CSA, FD, and WFR of the median nerve can be helpful in defining subtypes of hereditary neuropathies. Muscle Nerve 47:385‐395, 2013  相似文献   

4.
Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease is among the most common inherited neurological disorders. Mutations in the gene mitofusin 2 (MFN2) cause the axonal subtype CMT2A, which has also been shown to be associated with optic atrophy, clinical signs of first motor neuron involvement, and early onset stroke. Mutations in MFN2 account for up to 20–30% of all axonal CMT type 2 cases. To further investigate the prevalence of MFN2 mutations and to add to the genotypic spectrum, we sequenced all exons of MFN2 in a cohort of 39 CMT2 patients. We identified seven variants, four of which are novel. One previously described change was co-inherited with a PMP22 duplication, which itself causes the demyelinating form CMT1A. Another mutation was a novel in frame deletion, which is a rare occurrence in the genotypic spectrum of MFN2 characterized mainly by missense mutations. Our results confirm a MFN2 mutation rate of ~15–20% in CMT2.  相似文献   

5.
Mitofusin‐2 (MFN2) mutations are the most common cause of autosomal dominant axonal Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth disease (CMT, type 2A), sometimes complicated by additional features such as optic atrophy (CMT6) and upper motor neuron involvement (CMT5). Several pathogenic mutations are reported, mainly acting in a dominant fashion, although few sequence variants behaved as recessive or semidominant in rare homozygous or compound heterozygous patients. We describe a 49‐year‐old woman with CMT5 associated with compound heterozygosity for two MFN2 variants, one already reported missense mutation (c.748C>T, p.R250W) and a novel nonsense sequence change (c.1426C>T, p.R476*). Her mother, carrying the p.R250W variant, had very late‐onset minimal axonal neuropathy, whilst the father harboring the nonsense sequence change had neither clinical nor electrophysiological neuropathy. The missense mutation is likely pathogenic according to in silico analyses and a previous report, while the nonsense variant is predicted to behave as a null allele. The p.R250W variant behaves as semidominant by causing only a mild, almost subclinical, neuropathy when heterozygous; the nonsense mutation in the father was phenotypically silent, suggesting that haploinsufficiency for MFN2 is not disease causative, but was deleterious in the daughter who had only one active mutated MFN2 allele.  相似文献   

6.
Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth disease (CMT) constitutes a heterogeneous group affecting motor and sensory neurons in the peripheral nervous system. MFN2 mutations are the most common cause of axonal CMT. We describe the clinical and mutational spectra of CMT patients harboring MFN2 mutations in Japan. We analyzed 1,334 unrelated patients with clinically suspected CMT referred by neurological and neuropediatric departments throughout Japan. We conducted mutation screening using a DNA microarray, targeted resequencing, and whole‐exome sequencing. We identified pathogenic or likely pathogenic MFN2 variants from 79 CMT patients, comprising 44 heterozygous and 1 compound heterozygous variants. A total of 15 novel variants were detected. An autosomal dominant family history was determined in 43 cases, and the remaining 36 cases were reported as sporadic with no family history. The mean onset age of CMT in these patients was 12 ± 14 (range 0–59) years. We observed neuropathic symptoms in all patients. Some had optic atrophy, vocal cord paralysis, or spasticity. We detected a compound heterozygous MFN2 mutation in a patient with a severe phenotype and the co‐occurrence of MFN2 and PMP22 mutations in a patient with an uncommon phenotype. MFN2 is the most frequent causative gene of CMT2 in Japan. We present 15 novel variants and broad clinical and mutational spectra of Japanese MFN2‐related CMT patients. Regardless of the onset age and inheritance pattern, MFN2 gene analysis should be performed. Combinations of causative genes should be considered to explain the phenotypic diversity.  相似文献   

7.
Mitofusin 2 (MFN2) mutations are the most common cause of axonal Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth disease (CMT2). The majority are inherited in an autosomal dominant manner but recessive and semi‐dominant kindreds have also been described. We previously reported a deletion of exons 7 and 8 resulting in nonsense‐mediated decay, segregating with disease when present in trans with another pathogenic MFN2 mutation. Detailed clinical and electrophysiological data on a series of five affected patients from four kindreds and, when available, their parents and relatives were collected. MFN2 Sanger sequencing, multiplex ligation probe amplification, and haplotype analysis were performed. A severe early‐onset CMT phenotype was seen in all cases: progressive distal weakness, wasting, and sensory loss from infancy or early childhood. Optic atrophy (four of five) and wheelchair dependency in childhood were common (four of five). All were compound heterozygous for a deletion of exons 7 and 8 in MFN2 with another previously reported pathogenic mutation (Phe216Ser, Thr362Met, and Arg707Trp). Carrier parents and relatives were unaffected (age range: 24–82 years). Haplotype analysis confirmed that the deletion had a common founder in all families.  相似文献   

8.
Charcot–Marie–Tooth type 2A disease (CMT2A), a dominantly inherited peripheral neuropathy, is caused by mutations in MFN2, a mitochondrial fusion protein. Having previously demonstrated a mitochondrial coupling defect in CMT2A patients’ fibroblasts, we here investigate mitochondrial oxygen consumption and the expression of adenine nucleotide translocase (ANT) and uncoupling proteins from eight other patients with the disease. The mitochondrial uncoupling was associated with a higher respiratory rate, essentially involving complex II proteins. Furthermore, a twofold increase in the expression of ANT led to the reduced efficiency of oxidative phosphorylation in CMT2A cells, suggesting that MFN2 plays a role in controlling ATP/ADP exchanges.  相似文献   

9.
Mutations in the Mitofusin 2 (MFN2) gene have been identified in patients with autosomal dominant axonal motor and sensory neuropathy or Charcot–Marie‐Tooth 2A (CMT2A). Here we describe clinical and pathological changes in an adult patient with sporadic hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy (HSAN) due to an MFN2 mutation. The patient was a 53‐year‐old man who had sensory involvement and anhidrosis in all limbs without motor features. The electrophysiological assessment documented severe axonal sensory neuropathy. The sural nerve biopsy confirmed the electrophysiological findings, revealing severe loss of myelinated and unmyelinated fibers with regeneration clusters. Genetic analysis revealed the previously identified mutation c.776 G > A in MFN2. Our report expands the phenotypic spectrum of MFN2‐related diseases. Sequencing of MFN2 should be considered in all patients presenting with late‐onset HSAN.  相似文献   

10.
Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth type 2A disease (CMT2A) is an inherited peripheral neuropathy mainly caused by mutations in the MFN2 gene coding for the mitochondrial fusion protein mitofusin 2. Although the disease is mainly inherited in a dominant fashion, few cases of early‐onset autosomal recessive CMT2A (AR‐CMT2A) have been reported in recent years. In this study, we characterized the structure of the mitochondrial network in cultured primary fibroblasts obtained from AR‐CMT2A family members. The patient‐derived cells showed an increase of the mitochondrial fusion with large connected networks and an increase of the mitochondrial volume. Interestingly, fibroblasts derived from the two asymptomatic parents showed similar changes to a lesser extent. These results support the hypothesis that AR‐CMT2A‐related MFN2 mutations acts through a semi‐dominant negative mechanism and suggest that other biological parameters might show mild alterations in asymptomatic heterozygote AR‐CMT2A patients. Such alterations could be useful biomarkers helping to distinguish MFN2 mutations from variants, a growing challenge with the advent of next generation sequencing into routine clinical practice.  相似文献   

11.
In contrast to Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1 disease (CMT1), which is most commonly caused by 17p11.2-p12 duplication (in 70% of CMT1 cases), the axonal form of hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy (CMT2) seemed to be a genetically heterogeneous disease group, with no single gene playing a major pathogenetic role. In 2004, 10 mutations were identified in CMT2A families in the MFN2 gene coding for the mitochondrial protein mitofusin-2, previously mapped to the 1p35-36 locus. In the last two years, MFN2 gene mutations were shown to be the most common cause of autosomal dominant hereditary axonopathy. In addition, MFN2 gene mutations were also identified in CMT type 6 (axonal neuropathy with optic nerve atrophy). Recent reports indicate that some MFN2 gene mutations may by inherited as autosomal recessive traits. As MFN2 gene mutations are the most common cause of autosomal dominant CMT2 disease (33% of cases), MFN2 gene testing may be considered a diagnostic test for CMT2.  相似文献   

12.
The prevalence of Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth (CMT) disease or hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy (HMSN) varies in different populations. While in some countries of Western Europe, the United States and Japan the dominant form of HMSN is the most frequent, in other countries such as those of the Mediterranean Basin, the autosomal recessive form (AR‐CMT) is more common. Autosomal recessive CMT cases are generally characterized by earlier onset, usually before the age of 2 or 3 years, and rapid clinical progression that results in severe polyneuropathy and more marked distal limb deformities such as pes equino‐varus, claw‐like hands, and often major spinal deformities. Recent clinical, morphological and molecular investigations of CMT families with autosomal recessive inheritance allowed the identification of many genes such as GDAP1, MTMR2, SBF2, NDRG1, EGR2, SH3TC2, PRX, FGD4, and FIG4, implicated in demyelinating forms (ARCMT1 or CMT4), and LMNA, MED25, HINT1, GDAP1, LRSAM1, NEFL, HSPB1 and MFN2 in axonal forms (ARCMT2). However, many patients remain without genetic diagnosis to date, prompting investigations into ARCMT families in order to help discover new genes and common pathways. This review summarizes recent advances regarding the genotypes and corresponding phenotypes of AR‐CMT.  相似文献   

13.
Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth disease 2A (CMT2A), caused by mutations in the mitofusin 2 gene (MFN2), is the most common CMT2 subtype. The aim of our study is to assess the frequency and summarize the genetic and clinical characteristics of Chinese CMT2A patients. A total of 17 coding exons of MFN2 were detected by direct sequencing in 82 unrelated Chinese families diagnosed as CMT2. Clinical evaluations were analyzed among CMT2A patients. We identified 14 missense variants in 9 sporadic and 6 familial cases, including four novel mutations (T129A, S249F, Q367P, and Q674L), 4 known mutations (R94W, R94Q, T105M, C132Y, M376V and Q751X), and 4 rare missense variants (K120E, C217F, K307E and T356S). A total of 23 patients had early‐onset phenotype. Two patients had a CMTNS score of 0 to 10; 16 had a score of 11 to 20; and 7 had a score greater than 20. Five patients were confirmed a de novo origin. Six of 14 variants were located or closed to the GTPase domain. We report four novel mutations and four rare missense variants. MFN2 mutations account for 18% of CMT2 families in mainland China. The common characteristics of Chinese pedigree are early disease onset and moderate phenotypes.  相似文献   

14.
The aim of our study was to characterize electrophysiologically and explain the genetic cause of severe Charcot–Marie–Tooth (CMT) in a 3.5‐year‐old with asymptomatic parents and a maternal grandfather with a history of mild adult‐onset axonal neuropathy. Severity of neuropathy was assessed by Charcot–Marie–Tooth neuropathy score (CMTNS). Whole‐exome sequencing was performed using an Illumina TruSeq Exome Enrichment Kit on the HiSeq 1500 with results followed up by Sanger sequencing on an ABI Prism 3500XL (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA). Paternity was confirmed using a panel of 15 hypervariable markers. Electrophysiological studies demonstrated severe axonal sensory‐motor neuropathy in the proband, mild motor neuropathy in his mother, and mild sensory‐motor neuropathy in his grandfather. CMTNS in the proband, his mother, and grandfather was 21, 1, and 12, respectively. On genetic analysis, the boy was found to carry a heterozygous dominant MFN2 T236M mutation transmitted via the maternal line and a de novo GDAP1 H123R mutation. Our findings emphasize the need to search for more than one causative mutation when significant intrafamilial variability of CMT phenotype occurs and underline the role of whole‐exome sequencing in the diagnosis of compound forms of CMT disease.  相似文献   

15.
Either dominantly inherited mutations in MFN2 encoding mitofusin 2 or GDAP1 encoding ganglioside-induced differentiation associated protein 1 may be associated with mild neuropathy. The proband, a 41-year-old woman, and her daughter present a severe axonal form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease. Both are heterozygous for the well-described mild variant p.R120W in GDAP1, which was transmitted by the pauci symptomatic proband's mother. Given that they had an early onset in the first decade and delayed walking acquisition, the other genes implicated in axonal forms of CMT disease were analyzed. A second mutation truncating MFN2 (p.Val160fsX26) was found in the proband and her daughter. This mutation was transmitted by the proband's father who has normal neurological examination. The proband underwent two nerve biopsies which showed an axonal degeneration, myelin modifications, and intra-axonal mitochondria with distorted cristae. Such abnormal mitochondria have been reported in cases with autosomal dominant MFN2 mutations and in one patient with an autosomal recessive GDAP1 mutation. Our two cases show that heterozygous truncation of MFN2, which is silent at least until the sixth decade, when combined with the mild p.R120W GDAP1 variant, leads to a severe neuropathy. This supports the emerging hypothesis of cumulative effects of MFN2 and GDAP1 mutation.  相似文献   

16.
Charcot–Marie–Tooth (CMT) diseases include a group of clinically heterogeneous inherited neuropathies subdivided into demyelinating (CMT1), axonal (CMT2) and intermediate CMT forms. CMTs are associated with different genes, although mutations in some of these genes may cause both clinical pictures. To date, more than 50 CMT genes have been identified, but more than half of the cases are due to mutations in MFN2, MPZ, GJB1 and PMP22. The aim of this study was to estimate the frequency of disease mutations of these four genes in the axonal form of CMT in order to evaluate their effectiveness in the molecular diagnosis of CMT2 patients. A cohort of 38 CMT2 Italian subjects was screened for mutations in the MFN2, MPZ and GJB1 genes by direct sequencing and for PMP22 rearrangements using the MLPA technique. Overall, we identified 15 mutations, 8 of which were novel: 11 mutations (28.9 %) were in the MFN2 gene, 2 (5.3 %) in MPZ and 2 (5.3 %) in PMP22. No mutations were found in GJB1. Two patients showed rearrangements in the PMP22 gene, which is commonly associated with CMT1 or HNPP phenotypes thus usually not tested in CMT2 patients. By including this gene in the analysis, we reached a molecular diagnosis rate of 39.5 %, which is one of the highest reported in the literature. Our findings confirm the MFN2 gene as the most common cause of CMT2 and suggest that PMP22 rearrangements should be considered in the molecular diagnosis of CMT2 patients.  相似文献   

17.
Dominant mutations in MFN2 cause a range of phenotypes, including severe, early‐onset axonal neuropathy, “classical CMT2,” and late‐onset axonal neuropathies. We report a large family with an axonal polyneuropathy, with clinical onset in the 20s, followed by slow progression.  相似文献   

18.
Charcot Marie Tooth disease (CMT) is a progressive motor and sensory polyneuropathy, it is characterized by a very heterogeneous molecular basis and phenotype. MFN2 and GDAP1 participate in mitochondrial energy metabolism and the rare coinheritance of its pathogenic variants has been associated with a cumulative effect in the observed phenotype. We describe a patient with a severe axonal CMT and inherited heterozygous MFN2 (p.Leu741Val) and GDAP1 (p.Gln163*) variants. In accordance with a possible digenic inheritance, none of the heterozygous carriers in his family were symptomatic or exhibited electrophysiological abnormalities. We also review all of the previously reported patients with coinheritance of variants in these two genes; similar to our patient, all exhibit a predominantly axonal severe CMT phenotype. Our findings expand the genotypic spectrum of CMT and further support that digenic inheritance should be considered for analyzing and counseling CMT patients.  相似文献   

19.
Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease is the most-common form of inherited motor and sensory neuropathy. The autosomal dominant axonal form of the disease (CMT2) is currently subdivided into seven types based on genetic localization. These are CMT2A (1p35-p36), CMT2B (3q13-q22), CMT2C (unknown), CMT2D (7p14), CMT2E (8p21), HMNSP (3q13.1), and CMT2F (7q11-q21). Two loci have thus far been identified for autosomal recessive CMT2; ARCMT2A (1q21.1-q21.3) and ARCMT2B (19q13.3). Mutations in four genes (connexin 32, myelin protein zero, neurofilament-light, and kinesin) have been associated with the CMT2 phenotype. We identified a novel neurofilament-light missense mutation (C64T) that causes the disease in a large Slovenian CMT2 family. This novel mutation shows complete co-segregation with the dominantly inherited CMT2 phenotype in our family. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

20.
Mutations of Dynamin 2 (DNM2) are responsible for several forms of neuromuscular disorder such as centronuclear myopathy, Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease (CMT) dominant intermediate type B, CMT 2M, and lethal congenital contracture syndrome 5. We describe a young man manifesting as length‐dependent sensorimotor neuropathy with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, but his mother only had very mild symptoms of peripheral neuropathy. The electrophysiological data meet the criteria of intermediate CMT. The main pathological findings of sural nerve biopsy reveal a severe loss of large myelinating fibers and some clusters of regenerative fibers in fascicles, which are consistent with an axonal neuropathy. However, myopathological changes show a chronic myopathy‐like pattern characterized by great variations of fiber size, increased connective tissue, rimmed vacuoles and predominance of type 2 fibers. A novel DNM2 mutation (p.G359D) in the middle domain is identified, which is highly evolutionarily conserved. DNM2‐related CMT disease is phenotypically heterogeneous in age at onset, clinical features and electrophysiological changes. The histopathological findings indicate the coexistence of typical axonal neuropathy and chronic myopathy in DNM2‐related neuromuscular diseases.  相似文献   

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