PNKP (polynucleotide kinase 39-phosphatase,
OMIM #605610) product is involved in the repair
of strand breaks and base damage in the DNA molecule
mainly caused by radical oxygen species. Deleterious
variants affecting this gene have been
previously associated with microcephaly, epilepsy,
and developmental delay.1 According to a previous
report, homozygous loss-of-function substitution in
PNKP was associated with cerebellar atrophy, neuropathy,
microcephaly, epilepsy, and intellectual
disability.2 Recently, whole-exome sequencing (WES)
performed in a cohort of Portuguese families with ataxia
with oculomotor apraxia (AOA) disclosed pathogenic
variants in PNKP in 11 individuals. Other clinical features
in that study included neuropathy, dystonia, cognitive
impairment, decreased vibration sense, pyramidal
signs, mild elevation in a-fetoprotein, and low levels of
albumin. This condition was named AOA type 4
(OMIM #616267), as the phenotype of AOA has been
previously associated with 3 other genes: APTX, SETX,
and PIK3R5.
3 Altogether, these reports demonstrate the
great phenotypic diversity associated with PNKP mutations.
In this article, we further enlarge this variability
by demonstrating that early-onset axonal sensory-motor
neuropathy (or axonal Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT)
disease) followed years later by ataxia without oculomotor
apraxia can be caused by deleterious variants in
PNKP. Full consent was obtained from the patient
and his parents for this publication.
Neurology Genetics 2015
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