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IMPORTANCE: Apart from Huntington's disease, little is known of the genetics of autosomal dominant chorea associated with dystonia. Here we identify adenylate cyclase 5 (ADCY5) as a likely new causal gene for early-onset chorea and dystonia. OBSERVATIONS: Whole exome sequencing in a three-generation family affected with autosomal dominant chorea associated with dystonia identified a single de novo mutation—c.2088+1G>A in a 5' donor splice-site of ADCY5—segregating with the disease. This mutation seeming leads to RNA instability and therefore ADCY5 haploinsufficiency. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Our finding confirms the genetic/clinical heterogeneity of the disorder; corroborated by previous identification of ADCY5 mutations in one family with dyskinesia-facial myokymia and in two unrelated sporadic cases of paxoysmal choreic/dystonia-facial myokymia; ADCY5's high expression in the striatum and movement disorders in ADCY5-deficient mice. Hence ADCY5 genetic analyses may be relevant in the diagnostic workup of unexplained early-onset hyperkinetic movement disorders.

Original publication

DOI

10.1002/mds.26115

Type

Journal article

Journal

Mov Disord

Publication Date

03/2015

Volume

30

Pages

423 - 427

Keywords

ADCY5, chorea associated with dystonia, exome, Adenylyl Cyclases, Adolescent, Adult, Chorea, DNA Mutational Analysis, Dystonic Disorders, Family Health, Female, Humans, Male, Mutation