MYORG-related disease is associated with central pontine calcifications and atypical parkinsonism

  • Chelban V.
  • Carecchio M.
  • Rea G.
  • Bowirrat A.
  • Kirmani S.
  • Magistrelli L.
  • Efthymiou S.
  • Schottlaender L.
  • Vandrovcova J.
  • Vincenzo Salpietro
  • Salsano E.
  • Pareyson D.
  • Chiapparini L.
  • Jan F.
  • Ibrahim S.
  • Khan F.
  • Qarnain Z.
  • Groppa S.
  • Bajaj N.
  • Balint B.
  • Bhatia K. P.
  • Lees A.
  • Morrison P. J.
  • Wood N. W.
  • Garavaglia B.
  • Houlden H.
Publication date
January 2020
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Abstract

ObjectiveTo identify the phenotypic, neuroimaging, and genotype-phenotype expression of MYORG mutations.MethodsUsing next-generation sequencing, we screened 86 patients with primary familial brain calcification (PFBC) from 60 families with autosomal recessive or absent family history that were negative for mutations in SLC20A2, PDGFRB, PDGBB, and XPR1. In-depth phenotyping and neuroimaging investigations were performed in all cases reported here.ResultsWe identified 12 distinct deleterious MYORG variants in 7 of the 60 families with PFBC. Overall, biallelic MYORG mutations accounted for 11.6% of PFBC families in our cohort. A heterogeneous phenotypic expression was identified within and between families with a median age at onset of 56.4 ye...

Extracted data

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