Gene behind childhood motor neurone disease identified

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A specific gene has been identified as the cause of motor neurone disease in children. International researchers sequenced the genes of nine people who developed severe motor neurone diseases at a young age, and were able to identify a common gene mutation they believe causes the condition in children. The researchers say their findings also provides some explanations on how the disease develops.

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From: Springer Nature

Genetics: Causative gene for early-onset ALS identified

A specific class of rare mutations in the gene SPTLC1 — which encodes a key metabolic molecule responsible for the production of a class of lipids called sphingolipids — exists in children with severe, early-onset amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Clinical findings reported in Nature Medicine reveal both a single genetic cause of early-onset ALS and a novel, metabolism-associated, molecular pathway that may contribute to neurodegeneration in other forms of the disease.

ALS is a progressive neurodegenerative disease that often results in death within 3–5 years of disease onset. Most cases occur sporadically, with important insights into the key drivers of ALS gained from clinical studies linking single-gene mutations directly to the disease.

Carsten Bönnemann and colleagues sequenced the genomes of nine ALS patients from seven families who developed a severe, early-onset form of ALS. The authors identify a rare set of mutations in a single gene — SPTLC1 — that encodes a component of an enzyme involved in lipid metabolism. Experiments revealed that these newly discovered ALS-causing mutations result in unrestrained sphingolipid production and accumulation in human motor neurons — the type of neurons that specifically degenerate in the disease.

This clinical study not only describes a new set of rare, single-gene mutations that underlie an aggressive and early-onset form of ALS, but also suggests that direct metabolic disturbance is a causative factor in disease development.

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Nature Medicine
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Organisation/s: National Institutes of Health, USA
Funder: Work in C.G.B.’s laboratory is supported by intramural funds of NINDS/NIH. Work in T.M.D.’s laboratory was supported by CDMRP grant W81XWH-20-1-0219. C.V.L is supported by a career development grant from NIH/NINDS (K08 NS10762). T.H. is supported by Swiss National Science Foundation grant 31003A_179371. M.A.L is supported by Swiss Foundation for Research on Muscle Diseases (FSRMM). R.H.B. is funded by NIH/NINDS (R01 NS072446) and the Deater foundation. Sequencing and analysis provided by the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard Center for Mendelian Genomics (Broad CMG) was funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute, the National Eye Institute and the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (grant UM1 HG008900) and, in part, by the National Human Genome Research Institute (grant R01 HG009141).
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