• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Novel CAPN1 missense variants in complex hereditary spastic paraplegia with early‐onset psychosis
  • Contributor: Alecu, Julian E.; Saffari, Afshin; Jumo, Hellen; Ziegler, Marvin; Strelko, Oleksandr; Brownstein, Catherine A.; Gonzalez‐Heydrich, Joseph; Rodan, Lance H.; Gorman, Mark P.; Sahin, Mustafa; Ebrahimi‐Fakhari, Darius
  • Published: Wiley, 2022
  • Published in: Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology, 9 (2022) 4, Seite 570-576
  • Language: Spanish
  • DOI: 10.1002/acn3.51531
  • ISSN: 2328-9503
  • Keywords: Neurology (clinical) ; General Neuroscience
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: AbstractCAPN1‐associated hereditary spastic paraplegia (SPG76) is a rare and clinically heterogenous syndrome due to loss of calpain‐1 function. Here we illustrate a translational approach to the case of an 18‐year‐old patient who first presented with psychiatric symptoms followed by spastic gait, intention tremor, and neurogenic bladder dysfunction, consistent with a complex form of HSP. Exome sequencing showed compound‐heterozygous missense variants in CAPN1 (NM_001198868.2: c.1712A>G (p.Asn571Ser)/c.1991C>T (p.Ser664Leu)) and a previously reported heterozygous stop‐gain variant in RCL1. In silico analyses of the CAPN1 variants predicted a deleterious effect and in vitro functional studies confirmed reduced calpain‐1 activity and dysregulated downstream signaling. These findings support a diagnosis of SPG76 and highlight that the psychiatric symptoms can precede the motor symptoms in HSP. Our results also suggest that multiple genes can potentially contribute to complex neuropsychiatric diseases.
  • Access State: Open Access