ABSTRACT:The neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCLs) form a group of autosomal recessively inherited neurodegenerative disorders that mainly affect children. Ten NCL forms can be distinguished by age at onset, clinicopathologic features, and genetics. In eight of these forms, the underlying genes have been identified. At present, approximately 10% of all patients do not fall into one of the eight known genetic forms of NCL. We have identified two Asian families with two novel homozygous mutations in the CLN5 gene. In the first Pakistani family, two children developed symptoms of an early juvenile NCL. After exclusion of mutations in genes known to be associated with this age of onset in families from many different countries (CLN1, CLN2, CLN3, CLN6, CLN8 and CLN10) SNP array-based homozygosity mapping led to the identification of a novel homozygous mutation c.1072_1073delTT (p.Leu358AlafsX4) in CLN5. In the second Afghan family, two children developed symptoms of a late infantile NCL. The mutation c.1137G>T (p.Trp379Cys) in CLN5 was identified. The affected children in these families represent the first reported CLN5 patients originating in Asian sibships. Expression analysis showed that mutant p.Leu358AlafsX4 CLN5 is truncated and lacks a used N-glycosylation site at Asn401. The missense mutation p.Trp379Cys affected neither the size nor glycosylation of the CLN5 protein. Double immunofluorescence microscopy showed that while the wild-type CLN5 protein is localized in lysosomes, both mutant CLN5 proteins are retained in the endoplasmic reticulum rather than reaching the lysosome.
Mutations in the CLN3 gene lead to juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis, a pediatric neurodegenerative disorder characterized by visual loss, epilepsy and psychomotor deterioration. Although most CLN3 patients carry the same 1-kb deletion in the CLN3 gene, their disease phenotype can be variable. The aims of this study were to (i) study the clinical phenotype in CLN3 patients with identical genotype, (ii) identify genes that are dysregulated in CLN3 disease regardless of the clinical course that could be useful as biomarkers, and (iii) find modifier genes that affect the progression rate of the disease. A total of 25 CLN3 patients homozygous for the 1-kb deletion were classified into groups with rapid, average or slow disease progression using an established clinical scoring system. Genome-wide expression profiling was performed in eight CLN3 patients with different disease progression and matched controls. The study showed high phenotype variability in CLN3 patients. Five genes were dysregulated in all CLN3 patients and present candidate biomarkers of the disease. Of those, dual specificity phosphatase 2 (DUSP2 ) was also validated in acutely CLN3-depleted cell models and in CbCln3Δex7/8 cerebellar precursor cells. A total of 13 genes were upregulated in patients with rapid disease progression and downregulated in patients with slow disease progression; one gene showed dysregulation in the opposite way. Among these potential modifier genes, guanine nucleotide exchange factor 1 for small GTPases of the Ras family (RAPGEF1) and transcription factor Spi-B (SPIB) were validated in an acutely CLN3-depleted cell model. These findings indicate that differential perturbations of distinct signaling pathways might alter disease progression and provide insight into the molecular alterations underlying neuronal dysfunction in CLN3 disease and neurodegeneration in general.
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