Prevalence of intronic repeat expansions in RFC1 in Dutch patients with CANVAS and adult-onset ataxia

Abstract Recently, an intronic biallelic (AAGGG) n repeat expansion in RFC1 was shown to be a cause of CANVAS and adult-onset ataxia in multiple populations. As the prevalence of the RFC1 repeat expansion in Dutch cases was unknown, we retrospectively tested 9 putative CANVAS cases and two independent cohorts (A and B) of 395 and 222 adult-onset ataxia cases, respectively, using the previously published protocol and, for the first time optical genome mapping to determine the size of the expanded RFC1 repeat. We identified the biallelic (AAGGG) n repeat expansion in 5/9 (55%) putative CANVAS pa... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Ghorbani, Fatemeh
de Boer-Bergsma, Jelkje
Verschuuren-Bemelmans, Corien C.
Pennings, Maartje
de Boer, Eddy N.
Kremer, Berry
Vanhoutte, Els K.
de Vries, Jeroen J.
van de Berg, Raymond
Kamsteeg, Erik-Jan
van Diemen, Cleo C.
Westers, Helga
van de Warrenburg, Bart P.
Verbeek, Dineke S.
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Reihe/Periodikum: Journal of Neurology ; volume 269, issue 11, page 6086-6093 ; ISSN 0340-5354 1432-1459
Verlag/Hrsg.: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Schlagwörter: Neurology (clinical) / Neurology
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27067388
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00415-022-11275-9

Abstract Recently, an intronic biallelic (AAGGG) n repeat expansion in RFC1 was shown to be a cause of CANVAS and adult-onset ataxia in multiple populations. As the prevalence of the RFC1 repeat expansion in Dutch cases was unknown, we retrospectively tested 9 putative CANVAS cases and two independent cohorts (A and B) of 395 and 222 adult-onset ataxia cases, respectively, using the previously published protocol and, for the first time optical genome mapping to determine the size of the expanded RFC1 repeat. We identified the biallelic (AAGGG) n repeat expansion in 5/9 (55%) putative CANVAS patients and in 10/617 (1.6%; cohorts A + B) adult-onset ataxia patients. In addition to the AAGGG repeat motif, we observed a putative GAAGG repeat motif in the repeat expansion with unknown significance in two adult-onset ataxia patients. All the expanded (AAGGG) n repeats identified were in the range of 800–1299 repeat units. The intronic biallelic RFC1 repeat expansion thus explains a number of the Dutch adult-onset ataxia cases that display the main clinical features of CANVAS, and particularly when ataxia is combined with neuropathy. The yield of screening for RFC1 expansions in unselected cohorts is relatively low. To increase the current diagnostic yield in ataxia patients, we suggest adding RFC1 screening to the genetic diagnostic workflow by using advanced techniques that attain long fragments.