Evidence for non-Mendelian inheritance in spastic paraplegia 7

2020 
Hereditary spastic paraplegia is a group of rare motor neuron diseases considered to be inherited in a classical monogenic Mendelian manner. Although the typical inheritance of spastic paraplegia type 7 is autosomal recessive, several reports have suggested that SPG7 variants may also cause autosomal dominant HSP. We aimed to conduct an exome-wide genetic analysis on a large Canadian cohort of hereditary spastic paraplegia patients and controls to examine the association of SPG7 and hereditary spastic paraplegia. In total, 585 hereditary spastic paraplegia patients from 372 families and 1,175 controls, including 580 unrelated individuals, were analyzed for the presence of SPG7 variants. Whole exome sequencing was performed on 400 hereditary spastic paraplegia patients (291 index cases) and all 1,175 controls. After excluding 38 biallelic hereditary spastic paraplegia type 7 patients, the frequency of heterozygous pathogenic/likely pathogenic SPG7 variant carriers (4.8%) among hereditary spastic paraplegia unrelated index cases who underwent WES, was significantly higher than among unrelated controls (1.7%; OR=2.88, 95%CI=1.24-6.66, p=0.009). The heterozygous SPG7 p.(Ala510Val) variant was found in 3.7% of index cases vs. 0.85% in unrelated controls (OR=4.42, 95%CI=1.49-13.07, p=0.005). We identified four heterozygous SPG7 variant carriers with an additional pathogenic variant in genes known to cause hereditary spastic paraplegia, compared to zero in controls (OR=19.58, 95%CI=1.05-365.13, p=0.0031; Fisher Exact test with Haldane-Anscombe correction), indicating potential digenic inheritance. We further identified four families with heterozygous variants in SPG7 and SPG7-interacting genes (CACNA1A, AFG3L2 and MORC2). Out of these, there is especially compelling evidence for epistasis between SPG7 and AFG3L2. The p.(Ile705Thr) variant in AFG3L2 is located at the interface between hexamer subunits, in a hotspot of mutations associated with spinocerebellar ataxia type 28 that affect its proteolytic function. Our results provide evidence for complex inheritance in SPG7-associated hereditary spastic paraplegia, which may include recessive and possibly dominant and digenic/epistasis forms of inheritance.
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