Biallelic Mutations in Snx14 Cause A Syndromic Form of Cerebellar Atrophy and Lysosome-Autophagosome Dysfunction
Date
2015Author
Akizu, Naiara
Cantagrel, Vincent
Zaki, Maha S.
Al-Gazali, Lihadh
Wang, Xin
Rosti, Rasim Ozgur
Dikoglu, Esra
Gelot, Antoinette Bernabe
Rosti, Basak
Vaux, Keith K.
Scott, Eric M.
Silhavy, Jennifer L.
Schroth, Jana
Copeland, Brett
Schaffer, Ashleigh E.
Gordts, Philip
Esko, Jeffrey D.
Buschman, Matthew D.
Fields, Seth J.
Napolitano, Gennaro
Ozgul, R. Koksal
Sagiroglu, Mahmut Samil
Azam, Matloob
Ismail, Samira
Aglan, Mona
Selim, Laila
Gamal, Iman
Hadi, Sawsan Abdel
El Badawy, Amera
Sadek, Abdelrahim A.
Mojahedi, Faezeh
Kayserili, Hulya
Masri, Amira
Bastaki, Laila
Temtamy, Samia
Müller, Ulrich
Desguerre, Isabelle
Casanova, Jean-Laurent
Dursun, Ali
Gunel, Murat
Gabriel, Stacey B.
de Lonlay, Pascale
Gleeson, Joseph G.
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Show full item recordAbstract
Pediatric-onset ataxias often present clinically with developmental delay and intellectual disability, with prominent cerebellar atrophy as a key neuroradiographic finding. Here we describe a novel clinically distinguishable recessive syndrome in 12 families with cerebellar atrophy together with ataxia, coarsened facial features and intellectual disability, due to truncating mutations in sorting nexin 14 (SNX14), encoding a ubiquitously expressed modular PX-domain-containing sorting factor. We found SNX14 localized to lysosomes, and associated with phosphatidyl-inositol (3,5)P2, a key component of late endosomes/lysosomes. Patient cells showed engorged lysosomes and slower autophagosome clearance rate upon starvation induction. Zebrafish morphants showed dramatic loss of cerebellar parenchyma, accumulated autophagosomes, and activation of apoptosis. Our results suggest a unique ataxia syndrome due to biallelic SNX14 mutations, leading to lysosome-autophagosome dysfunction.
URI
https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.3256https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4414867/
http://hdl.handle.net/11655/14873