4.5 Review

NUBPL mitochondrial disease: new patients and review of the genetic and clinical spectrum

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS
Volume 58, Issue 5, Pages 314-325

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jmedgenet-2020-106846

Keywords

clinical genetics; metabolic disorders; molecular genetics; neurology

Funding

  1. Spooner Girls Foundation
  2. CART (Center for Autism Research and Translation)
  3. ICTS (Institute of Clinical Translational Science, UC Irvine)
  4. BBSRC [BBS/E/J/000PR9790] Funding Source: UKRI

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This study reports clinical and genetic findings in five new patients with NUBPL disease, increasing the number and phenotypic variability of diagnosed patients globally. The clinical features of these patients include early neurological symptoms, global developmental delay, and cerebellar dysfunction, with mitochondrial function studies showing significant abnormalities.
Background The nucleotide binding protein-like (NUBPL) gene was first reported as a cause of mitochondrial complex I deficiency (MIM 613621, 618242) in 2010. To date, only eight patients have been reported with this mitochondrial disorder. Five other patients were recently reported to have NUBPL disease but their clinical picture was different from the first eight patients. Here, we report clinical and genetic findings in five additional patients (four families). Methods Whole exome sequencing was used to identify patients with compound heterozygous NUBPL variants. Functional studies included RNA-Seq transcript analyses, missense variant biochemical analyses in a yeast model (Yarrowia lipolytica) and mitochondrial respiration experiments on patient fibroblasts. Results The previously reported c.815-27T>C branch-site mutation was found in all four families. In prior patients, c.166G>A [p.G56R] was always found in cis with c.815-27T>C, but only two of four families had both variants. The second variant found in trans with c.815-27T>C in each family was: c.311T>C [p.L104P] in three patients, c.693+1G>A in one patient and c.545T>C [p.V182A] in one patient. Complex I function in the yeast model was impacted by p.L104P but not p.V182A. Clinical features include onset of neurological symptoms at 3-18 months, global developmental delay, cerebellar dysfunction (including ataxia, dysarthria, nystagmus and tremor) and spasticity. Brain MRI showed cerebellar atrophy. Mitochondrial function studies on patient fibroblasts showed significantly reduced spare respiratory capacity. Conclusion We report on five new patients with NUBPL disease, adding to the number and phenotypic variability of patients diagnosed worldwide, and review prior reported patients with pathogenic NUBPL variants.

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