4.7 Article

THAP1 mutations (DYT6) are an additional cause of early-onset dystonia

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 74, Issue 10, Pages 846-850

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e3181d5276d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Medical Research Council (MRC) UK
  2. Michael J Fox Foundation
  3. Brain Research Trust (BRT)
  4. National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD)
  5. Ataxia UK
  6. British Medical Association
  7. Novartis
  8. Brain Research Trust
  9. Austrian Science Fund FWF
  10. Erwin Schrdinger Grant
  11. MRC [G0701075, G0601943, G0802760] Funding Source: UKRI
  12. Medical Research Council [G0802760, G0701075, G0601943] Funding Source: researchfish
  13. Parkinson's UK [G-0907] Funding Source: researchfish

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Background: The clinical phenotype of DYT6 consists mainly of primary craniocervical dystonia. Recently, the THAP1 gene was identified as the cause of DYT6, where a total of 13 mutations have been identified in Amish-Mennonite and European families. Methods: We sequenced the THAP1 gene in a series of 362 British, genetically undetermined, primary dystonia patients (78 with focal, 186 with segmental, and 98 with generalized dystonia) and in 28 dystonia-manifesting DYT1 patients and 176 normal control individuals. Results: Nine coding mutations were identified in the THAP1 gene. Two were small deletions, 2 were nonsense, and 5 were missense. Eight mutations were heterozygous, and 1 was homozygous. The main clinical presentation of cases with THAP1 mutations was early-onset (<30 years) dystonia in the craniocervical region or the limbs (8 of 9 patients). There was phenotypic variability with laryngeal or oromandibular dystonia present in 3 cases. Four of 9 THAP1 cases developed generalized dystonia. Conclusions: The number of THAP1 mutations has been significantly expanded, indicating an uncommon but important cause of dystonia. Coding mutations account for 9 of 362 dystonia cases, indicating a mutation frequency of 2.5% of dystonia cases in the population that we have screened. The majority of cases reported here with THAP1 mutations had craniocervical-or limb-onset segmental dystonia, but we also identified 1 homozygous THAP1 mutation, associated initially with writer's dystonia and then developing segmental dystonia. Three of our patients had a nonsense or frameshift THAP1 mutation and the clinical features of laryngeal or oromandibular dystonia. These data suggest that early-onset dystonia that includes the involvement of the larynx or face is frequently associated with THAP1 mutations. Neurology (R) 2010; 74: 846-850

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