Clinical Description
BSCL2-related neurologic disorders affect both the lower and upper motor neurons. Detailed clinical and electrophysiologic studies in 90 individuals with the p.Asn88Ser pathogenic variant showed incomplete penetrance, clinical intrafamilial variability with several phenotypic subtypes being reported (even within the same family), and broad variation in disease severity, suggesting a subdivision into the following six main phenotypes (subtypes 1-6), all of which can be seen in the same family [Auer-Grumbach et al 2005].
Subtype 1. No signs or symptoms. No clinical or electrophysiologic abnormalities are present.
Subtype 2. Clinical signs but no symptoms. Suggestive clinical signs include foot deformity, mild asymmetric thenar wasting, brisk lower-limb deep-tendon reflexes (DTRs), and/or electrophysiologic abnormalities.
Subtype 3. Distal hereditary motor neuropathy (dHMN) type V phenotype. Symptoms are exclusively or predominantly symmetric or unilateral muscle weakness and wasting in the small muscles of the hand. Gait disturbances may occur later. Muscle tone is normal; tendon reflexes may be preserved or slightly brisk.
Subtype 4. Silver syndrome phenotype [Silver 1966]. Findings are mild-to-severe symmetric or unilateral amyotrophy of the small muscles of the hand, variable spasticity of the lower limbs, and other signs of pyramidal tract disturbance (very brisk tendon reflexes and/or extensor plantar responses and/or increased muscle tone).
Subtype 5. Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy type 2 (spinal CMT) phenotype. Findings are distal muscle weakness and wasting of the lower limbs and, to a lesser degree, of the upper limbs. Muscle tone is normal and tendon reflexes are usually preserved or slightly brisk. Depending on the absence or presence of clinical and electrophysiologic sensory abnormalities, affected individuals may show spinal CMT syndrome or hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy (HMSN) type II.
Subtype 6. Hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) phenotype. Findings include: absence of weakness or wasting of the small hand muscles; and presence of spastic paraparesis in the lower limbs manifesting as EITHER of the following:
Pure hereditary spastic paraparesis (pHSP) when no additional clinical or electrophysiologic features (except foot deformity) are present
Complicated hereditary spastic paraparesis (cHSP) when spasticity is accompanied by amyotrophy of the distal muscles of the legs and/or pathologic nerve conduction velocities. This latter group may also be diagnosed as hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy (HMSN) type V.
Onset. Most affected individuals develop symptoms in the second decade of life, but some first notice symptoms as late as the seventh decade. Only a few persons have signs before age ten years. In some individuals with mild disease, the age at onset cannot be determined as they are not aware of being affected.
Tendon reflexes are normal in the upper extremities. Patellar and Achilles tendon reflexes are rarely absent or diminished. Most individuals have preserved or even brisk reflexes, which correspond to increased muscle tone.
Affected individuals often present with other signs of pyramidal tract involvement such as extensor plantar responses. Individuals with spasticity in the lower limbs often complain of leg stiffness and muscle cramps.
Hand muscle involvement is a major feature. Weakness that is often more evident in one hand than the other and wasting of the thenar and first dorsal interosseus muscles often result in a characteristic adduction position of the thumb and difficulty with handwriting. In advanced stages of the disease, camptodactyly (fixed flexion deformity of the fingers) can be a significant finding in some, but not all, affected individuals. The predilection for these two muscle groups and the left-right asymmetry (which does not correlate with handedness in the affected individual) remain unexplained.
Gait. Mild-to-severe gait abnormalities are often observed and result from EITHER or BOTH of the following:
Foot deformity is present in the majority of individuals and may vary from mild to severe pes cavus, congenital pes planus, hammertoes, or clubfeet.
Prognosis. Disease progression is slow. People with this disorder have a generally normal life expectancy.
Histopathology. Sural nerve biopsy shows mild loss of myelinated fibers and fiber regeneration [Chen et al 2009, Luigetti et al 2010]. The diameter histogram shows a reduction in small fibers (diameter <10 μm).
Genotype-Phenotype Correlations
Individuals with the BSCL2 pathogenic missense variant p.Asn88Ser (in which the amino acid asparagine required for N-glycosylation is exchanged) usually remain ambulatory and active up to old age. In many individuals, the phenotype is dominated by subtypes 2, 3, or 5 [Auer-Grumbach et al 2000].
Individuals with the BSCL2 pathogenic variant p.Ser90Leu exhibit more severe phenotypes (subtypes 4 and 6). Some of these individuals may become wheelchair bound during the second decade [Irobi et al 2004].
Pathogenic variant p.Ser90Trp, which disrupts the N-glycosylation motif, was identified in affected individuals from a Korean family with autosomal dominant CMT type 2. These individuals had predominant hand involvement, pyramidal signs, and sensory loss. Notably, the majority of individuals (73%) complained of sensory loss, in which vibration sense was prominently impaired [Choi et al 2013].
A variant of unknown significance (p.Arg96His) that is not in the N-glycosylation motif was identified in an individual with sporadic dHMN from a Taiwanese cohort. In vitro studies demonstrated that this variant results in the aggregation tendency of seipin protein, but does not induce endoplasmic reticulum stress, which is characteristically provoked by both p.Asn88Ser and p.Ser90Leu pathogenic variants [Hsiao et al 2016].
Note: (1) Pathogenic null variants in BSCL2 are associated with autosomal recessive Berardinelli-Seip congenital lipodystrophy (see Genetically Related Disorders). (2) Exon 7 skipping due to pathogenic variant c.985C>T results in an early-onset progressive encephalopathy (see Genetically Related Disorders).