Discrepancy in redetermination of SMN2 copy numbers in children with SMA
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Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a rare autosomal recessive inherited neuromuscular disease with an incidence of about 1:6,000 to 1:10,000 in newborns. The clinical spectrum of severity is broad and ranges from early and severe weakness with respiratory insufficiency (type 1) to milder phenotypes with onset during childhood or adolescence (types 2–3).1 SMA is caused by deletions and less commonly by point mutations in SMN1 (survival of motor neuron) on chromosome 5q. The paralogous SMN2 gene is present in a variable copy number and differs from SMN1 by few nucleotides. A single nucleotide change disrupts an exonic splicing enhancer and creates a new exonic splicing silencer resulting in splice modification and exclusion of exon 7, so that a mainly truncated and unstable SMN∆7 protein is produced.2 While being of no importance in healthy individuals, SMN2 is crucial in patients with SMA, where smaller amounts of functional SMN protein (estimated to be around 10%) can be produced by each SMN2 copy. Therefore, the number of SMN2 copies inversely correlates with disease severity.3,4 SMN2 is also targeted by antisense-oligonucleotide therapy, which leads to higher amounts of functional SMN protein by modifying splicing of exon 7.5
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Comment, page 270
- Received November 21, 2018.
- Accepted in final form May 2, 2019.
- © 2019 American Academy of Neurology
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Letters: Rapid online correspondence
- Author response: Discrepancy in redetermination of SMN2 copy numbers in children with SMA
- Janbernd Kirschner, MD, University Medical Hospital Bonn
- Jutta Becker, PhD, Center for Molecular Medicine Cologne, Institute for Genetics, and Center for Rare Diseases Cologne, University of Cologne
- David Schorling, MD, Medical Center, University of Freiburg
- Astrid Pechmann, MD, Medical Center, University of Freiburg
- Brunhilde Wirth, MD, Center for Molecular Medicine Cologne, Institute for Genetics, and Center for Rare Diseases Cologne, University of Cologne
Submitted September 02, 2019 - Reader response: Discrepancy in redetermination of SMN2 copy numbers in children with SMA
- Tamara Dangouloff, PhD Student, Neuromuscular Center, Department of Pediatrics, University Hospital Liège & University of Liège, Belgium
- François Boemer, Head of Screening Center, Genetic Biochemistry Laboratory, University Hospital Liège & University of Liège, Belgium
- Vinciane Dideberg, Geneticist, Molecular Genetics Laboratory, Human Genetics Department, University Hospital Liège & University of Liège, Belgium
- Jean-Hubert Caberg, Geneticist, Molecular Genetics Laboratory, Human Genetics Department, University Hospital Liège & University of Liège, Belgium
- Laurent Servais, Neuropediatrician, Head of Neuromuscular Center, University Hospital Liège & University of Liège, Belgium / MDUK neuromuscular center, Department of Paediatrics, University
Submitted August 12, 2019
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