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Truncating SLC5A7 mutations underlie a spectrum of dominant hereditary motor neuropathies

Truncating SLC5A7 mutations underlie a spectrum of dominant hereditary motor neuropathies
Truncating SLC5A7 mutations underlie a spectrum of dominant hereditary motor neuropathies
Objective: to identify the genetic cause of disease in 2 previously unreported families with forms of distal hereditary motor neuropathies (dHMNs).

Methods: the first family comprises individuals affected by dHMN type V, which lacks the cardinal clinical feature of vocal cord paralysis characteristic of dHMN-VII observed in the second family. Next-generation sequencing was performed on the proband of each family. Variants were annotated and filtered, initially focusing on genes associated with neuropathy. Candidate variants were further investigated and confirmed by dideoxy sequence analysis and cosegregation studies. Thorough patient phenotyping was completed, comprising clinical history, examination, and neurologic investigation.

Results: dHMNs are a heterogeneous group of peripheral motor neuron disorders characterized by length-dependent neuropathy and progressive distal limb muscle weakness and wasting. We previously reported a dominant-negative frameshift mutation located in the concluding exon of the SLC5A7 gene encoding the choline transporter (CHT), leading to protein truncation, as the likely cause of dominantly-inherited dHMN-VII in an extended UK family. In this study, our genetic studies identified distinct heterozygous frameshift mutations located in the last coding exon of SLC5A7, predicted to result in the truncation of the CHT C-terminus, as the likely cause of the condition in each family.

Conclusions: this study corroborates C-terminal CHT truncation as a cause of autosomal dominant dHMN, confirming upper limb predominating over lower limb involvement, and broadening the clinical spectrum arising from CHT malfunction.
Salter, Claire G.
fd214de9-a3f8-4db7-93e5-64d399182975
Beijer, Danique
46b4a604-9b38-4f7b-ae4b-72cd16c61e11
Hardy, Holly
59d187dd-6dd9-4e85-879f-906a9f290f8c
et al.
Salter, Claire G.
fd214de9-a3f8-4db7-93e5-64d399182975
Beijer, Danique
46b4a604-9b38-4f7b-ae4b-72cd16c61e11
Hardy, Holly
59d187dd-6dd9-4e85-879f-906a9f290f8c

Salter, Claire G., Beijer, Danique and Hardy, Holly , et al. (2018) Truncating SLC5A7 mutations underlie a spectrum of dominant hereditary motor neuropathies. Neurology. Genetics, 4 (2), [e222]. (doi:10.1212/NXG.0000000000000222).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to identify the genetic cause of disease in 2 previously unreported families with forms of distal hereditary motor neuropathies (dHMNs).

Methods: the first family comprises individuals affected by dHMN type V, which lacks the cardinal clinical feature of vocal cord paralysis characteristic of dHMN-VII observed in the second family. Next-generation sequencing was performed on the proband of each family. Variants were annotated and filtered, initially focusing on genes associated with neuropathy. Candidate variants were further investigated and confirmed by dideoxy sequence analysis and cosegregation studies. Thorough patient phenotyping was completed, comprising clinical history, examination, and neurologic investigation.

Results: dHMNs are a heterogeneous group of peripheral motor neuron disorders characterized by length-dependent neuropathy and progressive distal limb muscle weakness and wasting. We previously reported a dominant-negative frameshift mutation located in the concluding exon of the SLC5A7 gene encoding the choline transporter (CHT), leading to protein truncation, as the likely cause of dominantly-inherited dHMN-VII in an extended UK family. In this study, our genetic studies identified distinct heterozygous frameshift mutations located in the last coding exon of SLC5A7, predicted to result in the truncation of the CHT C-terminus, as the likely cause of the condition in each family.

Conclusions: this study corroborates C-terminal CHT truncation as a cause of autosomal dominant dHMN, confirming upper limb predominating over lower limb involvement, and broadening the clinical spectrum arising from CHT malfunction.

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Accepted/In Press date: 15 November 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 March 2018
Published date: April 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 509420
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509420
PURE UUID: 09f43622-68e2-4f59-99ee-07b24b2c30fd
ORCID for Claire G. Salter: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2494-1644

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Date deposited: 20 Feb 2026 17:51
Last modified: 21 Feb 2026 03:23

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Contributors

Author: Claire G. Salter ORCID iD
Author: Danique Beijer
Author: Holly Hardy
Corporate Author: et al.

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