Abstract

Heterozygous mutations in HTRA1 were recently found to cause autosomal dominant cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD), and it was named HTRA1-autosomal dominant disease (AD-HTRA1) in the consensus recommendations of the European Academy of Neurology. This study aimed to investigate the clinical features of a mutation in HTRA1 and the effect of HTRA1 mutation on white matter hyperintensity (WMH). A proband's brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed multiple lacunar infarctions and multiple WMH in the lateral ventricle, external capsule, frontal lobe and corpus callosum. The proband and family members were tested for CSVD-related genes by next-generation sequencing and the clinical data of the patients were collected. The published literature on AD-HTRA1 was collected, and the clinical characteristics and pathogenicity of the patients were summarized. Combined Annotation Dependent Depletion (CADD) is a tool for scoring the deleteriousness of single-nucleotide variants and insertion/deletion variants in the human genome. The relationship between the degree of WMH and the pathogenicity of the mutation was further analyzed. It was found that the proband and her family members had a heterozygous missense mutation of c.854C > T (p.P285L) in the 4 exon of HTRA1 gene. A retrospective analysis of 5 families with c.854C > T mutation found that the patients had an early age of onset, cognitive impairment was more common, and alopecia and spondylosis could be combined at the same time. By univariate analysis, the severity of WMH was found to be significantly associated with the mutated CADD score (p < 0.05, Spearman's rho = 0.266). The clinical manifestations of AD-HTRA1 with mutation site c.854C > T (p.P285L) are similar to CARASIL, and brain MRI are mainly moderate or severe WMH and lacunar infarction (LI). WMH are affected by mutation sites. Therefore, our pathogenicity score for mutations can predict the severity of WMH.

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