Abstract

Paroxysmal dyskinesia can be subdivided into three clinical syndromes: paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia or choreoathetosis, paroxysmal exercise-induced dyskinesia, and paroxysmal non-kinesigenic dyskinesia. Each subtype is associated with the known causative genes PRRT2, SLC2A1 and PNKD, respectively. Although separate screening studies have been carried out on each of the paroxysmal dyskinesia genes, to date there has been no large study across all genes in these disorders and little is known about the pathogenic mechanisms. We analysed all three genes (the whole coding regions of SLC2A1 and PRRT2 and exons one and two of PNKD) in a series of 145 families with paroxysmal dyskinesias as well as in a series of 53 patients with familial episodic ataxia and hemiplegic migraine to investigate the mutation frequency and type and the genetic and phenotypic spectrum. We examined the mRNA expression in brain regions to investigate how selective vulnerability could help explain the phenotypes and analysed the effect of mutations on patient-derived mRNA. Mutations in the PRRT2, SLC2A1 and PNKD genes were identified in 72 families in the entire study. In patients with paroxysmal movement disorders 68 families had mutations (47%) out of 145 patients. PRRT2 mutations were identified in 35% of patients, SLC2A1 mutations in 10%, PNKD in 2%. Two PRRT2 mutations were in familial hemiplegic migraine or episodic ataxia, one SLC2A1 family had episodic ataxia and one PNKD family had familial hemiplegic migraine alone. Several previously unreported mutations were identified. The phenotypes associated with PRRT2 mutations included a high frequency of migraine and hemiplegic migraine. SLC2A1 mutations were associated with variable phenotypes including paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia, paroxysmal non-kinesigenic dyskinesia, episodic ataxia and myotonia and we identified a novel PNKD gene deletion in familial hemiplegic migraine. We found that some PRRT2 loss-of-function mutations cause nonsense mediated decay, except when in the last exon, whereas missense mutations do not affect mRNA. In the PNKD family with a novel deletion, mRNA was truncated losing the C-terminus of PNKD-L and still likely loss-of-function, leading to a reduction of the inhibition of exocytosis, and similar to PRRT2, an increase in vesicle release. This study highlights the frequency, novel mutations and clinical and molecular spectrum of PRRT2, SLC2A1 and PNKD mutations as well as the phenotype-genotype overlap among these paroxysmal movement disorders. The investigation of paroxysmal movement disorders should always include the analysis of all three genes, but around half of our paroxysmal series remain genetically undefined implying that additional genes are yet to be identified.

Highlights

  • Paroxysmal dyskinesia was first reported in 1892 by Shuzo Kure in a 23-year-old Japanese man, who had frequent movement-induced paroxysmal attacks from the age of 10 years

  • We identify the mutation frequency and spectrum as well as genetic and phenotypic heterogeneity, describe novel mutations, and investigate the mutation mechanisms amongst the paroxysmal dyskinesias

  • Episodic ataxia and familial hemiplegic migraine cases were negative for mutations in the KCNA1 and CACNA1A genes by direct sequencing of all codons

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Summary

Introduction

Paroxysmal dyskinesia was first reported in 1892 by Shuzo Kure in a 23-year-old Japanese man, who had frequent movement-induced paroxysmal attacks from the age of 10 years. Gowers (1901) described a similar child, but he considered this movement disorder an epileptic phenomenon, and in 1940, Mount and Reback (1940) described a 23-year-old with involuntary writhing and posturing of the trunk and extremities and labelled this condition paroxysmal dystonic choreoathetosis. Kertesz (1967) and Weber (1967) described families with this condition termed paroxysmal kinesigenic choreo-athetosis and familial paroxysmal dystonia, and Demirkiran and Jankovic (1995) amalgamated the many terms used, suggesting three subtypes, comprising paroxysmal kinesigenic (PKD or PKC), non-kinesigenic (PNKD), and exercise-induced dyskinesia (PED) (Bruno et al, 2004, 2007; Bhatia, 2011). The function of the protein is unknown, but it has been shown to interact with the synaptic protein SNAP25

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