Summary
Clinical characteristics.
DYT1 early-onset isolated dystonia typically presents in childhood or adolescence and only on occasion in adulthood. Dystonic muscle contractions causing posturing or irregular tremor of a leg or arm are the most common presenting findings. Dystonia is usually first apparent with specific actions such as writing or walking. Over time, the contractions frequently (but not invariably) become evident with less specific actions and spread to other body regions. No other neurologic abnormalities are present. Disease severity varies considerably even within the same family. Isolated writer's cramp may be the only sign.
Diagnosis/testing.
The diagnosis of DYT1 dystonia is established in a proband by identification of a heterozygous TOR1A pathogenic variant on molecular genetic testing. A TOR1A three base-pair deletion, c.907_909delGAG, is identified in most affected individuals.
Management.
Treatment of manifestations: Oral medications, either alone or in combination, are usually tried first, including anticholinergics, baclofen, benzodiazepines, and others. Botulinum toxin injections for treatment of focal symptoms can be used in conjunction with oral medications. If oral medications and botulinum toxin injections do not provide sufficient control of symptoms, surgery enabling deep-brain stimulation (DBS) of the globus pallidus interna (GPi) should be considered.
Prevention of secondary complications: Aggressive medical and surgical intervention to prevent contractures of the joints and deformities of the spine.
Surveillance: Follow up with a neurologist specializing in movement disorders several times a year.
Agents/circumstances to avoid: The extremities affected by dystonia should not be placed in a brace or cast, unless medically necessary, as this can worsen the dystonia.
Genetic counseling.
DYT1 dystonia is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner with reduced penetrance. Offspring of an affected individual or of an asymptomatic individual known to have a TOR1A pathogenic variant have a 50% chance of inheriting the variant and if inherited a 30% chance of developing clinical findings. Once the TOR1A c.907_909delGAG deletion has been identified in an affected family member, prenatal testing for a pregnancy at increased risk and preimplantation genetic testing for DYT1 dystonia are possible.
Diagnosis
Suggestive Findings
DYT1 early-onset isolated dystonia should be suspected in individuals with the following:
Isolated dystonia (defined as involuntary contraction of muscles that causes repetitive, patterned, and often twisting movements or postures) with:
No other abnormalities on neurologic examination (except tremor);
Normal routine neuroimaging;
No history of known cause of acquired dystonia (e.g., exposure to neuroleptic medications; cerebral trauma, infarct, infection).
Onset of dystonia before age 26 years (Note: Older age of onset may be seen among relatives of affected individuals; family members with later onset tend to have arm dystonia in the form of writer's cramp [
Bressman et al 2000].)
Family history of early-onset dystonia (Note: Lack of a family history of early-onset dystonia does not preclude the diagnosis.)
Factors that are more specific to DYT1 early-onset isolated dystonia, including:
Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry (although DYT1 dystonia can occur in individuals of any ethnicity);
Onset in a limb before age 26 years;
Two or more affected limbs.
Establishing the Diagnosis
The diagnosis of DYT1 early-onset isolated dystonia is established in a proband by identification of a heterozygous pathogenic variant in TOR1A on molecular genetic testing (see Table 1).
Molecular testing approaches can include single-gene testing, use of a multigene panel, and genomic testing:
Single-gene testing. Because the
c.907_909delGAG variant is the only definitive pathogenic variant in
TOR1A associated with DYT1 early-onset isolated dystonia identified to date, targeted analysis for this pathogenic variant can be performed first.
In the absence of the
c.907_909delGAG variant, the clinical utility of full sequence analysis is limited. Despite extensive screening, only a few variants in
TOR1A have been observed in individuals with related phenotypes (reviewed in
Dobričić et al [2015]); see
Molecular Genetics.
Sequence analysis may be followed by gene-targeted deletion/duplication analysis if no pathogenic variant is found; however, since DYT1 early-onset isolated dystonia occurs through a dominant-negative mechanism and large intragenic deletion or duplication has not been reported, testing for intragenic deletions or duplication is unlikely to identify a disease-causing variant.
A multigene panel that includes
TOR1A and other genes of interest (see
Differential Diagnosis) may also be considered after targeted c.907_909delGAG testing. Note: (1) The genes included in the panel and the diagnostic sensitivity of the testing used for each gene vary by laboratory and are likely to change over time. (2) Some multigene panels may include genes not associated with the condition discussed in this
GeneReview; thus, clinicians need to determine which multigene panel is most likely to identify the genetic cause of the condition while limiting identification of variants of uncertain significance and pathogenic variants in genes that do not explain the underlying phenotype. (3) In some laboratories, panel options may include a custom laboratory-designed panel and/or custom phenotype-focused exome analysis that includes genes specified by the clinician. (4) Methods used in a panel may include sequence analysis, deletion/duplication analysis, and/or other non-sequencing-based tests.
For an introduction to multigene panels click
here. More detailed information for clinicians ordering genetic tests can be found
here.
More comprehensive genomic testing (when available) including exome sequencing and genome sequencing may be considered if single-gene testing (and/or use of a multigene panel that includes
TOR1A) fails to confirm a diagnosis in an individual with features of DYT1 early-onset isolated dystonia. Such testing may provide or suggest a diagnosis not previously considered (e.g., mutation of a different gene or genes that results in a similar clinical presentation). For an introduction to comprehensive genomic testing click
here. More detailed information for clinicians ordering genomic testing can be found
here.
Table 1.
Molecular Genetic Testing Used in DYT1 Early-Onset Isolated Dystonia
View in own window
Gene 1 | Method | Proportion of Probands with a Pathogenic Variant 2 Detectable by Method |
---|
TOR1A
| Sequence analysis 3 | >99% 4 |
Gene-targeted deletion/duplication analysis 5 | Unknown 6 |
- 1.
- 2.
- 3.
Sequence analysis detects variants that are benign, likely benign, of uncertain significance, likely pathogenic, or pathogenic. Variants may include small intragenic deletions/insertions and missense, nonsense, and splice site variants; typically, exon or whole-gene deletions/duplications are not detected. For issues to consider in interpretation of sequence analysis results, click here.
- 4.
- 5.
Gene-targeted deletion/duplication analysis detects intragenic deletions or duplications. Methods used may include a range of techniques such as quantitative PCR, long-range PCR, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA), and a gene-targeted microarray designed to detect single-exon deletions or duplications.
- 6.
No data on detection rate of gene-targeted deletion/duplication analysis are available.
Clinical Characteristics
Clinical Description
Dystonia is the involuntary sustained or intermittent contraction of muscles that causes movements often resulting in twisting and posturing of the involved body region. An updated definition and classification for dystonia can be found in Albanese et al [2013].
DYT1 dystonia is a form of early-onset isolated dystonia; it is considered an isolated dystonia because it is not associated with other neurologic or systemic abnormalities.
Age of onset. The average age of onset of DYT1 dystonia is approximately 12 years; the median age is between nine and 11 years. Onset ranging from age four to 64 years has been reported [Opal et al 2002, Bressman 2004], with the vast majority beginning before age 26 years.
Life span is not thought to be shortened.
Presentation. DYT1 dystonia usually starts in a leg (average age 9 years) or an arm (average age 15 years). Initially, dystonia is apparent with specific actions; typically, there is a change in gait (foot inversion or eversion, abnormal flexion of the knee or hip) or problems writing. The small minority of individuals who do not have initial limb involvement have onset in trunk, cervical, or cranial muscles.
Once they appear, dystonic movements usually persist through life.
Pain is not a prominent finding except in cervical dystonia, which is uncommon in DYT1 dystonia.
Approximately 20% of DYT1 dystonia is restricted to a single body region, usually as writer's cramp. Unusual phenotypic expression of DYT1 dystonia includes isolated blepharospasm [Tuffery-Giraud et al 2001] and fluctuating unilateral myoclonic dystonia [Gatto et al 2003]. When a group of affected Korean individuals were compared to the typical northern European affected individuals, Korean individuals more commonly had segmental dystonia with more frequent axial onset of symptoms [Lee et al 2012].
Progression. In most (not all) individuals who have onset in a leg, dystonia progresses over months to years. The contractions become less action-specific and may become present at rest. The dystonia can also spread to other body regions, frequently progressing over a period of months to years to "generalized dystonia" involving other limbs and the trunk. In individuals with onset in an arm, progression is more variable and dystonia generalizes in only approximately 50%. Individuals with onset in the neck or cranial muscles also have variable progression. Overall, 60% to 70% of individuals have progression to generalized or multifocal dystonia involving at least a leg and arm, and often axial muscles. Spread to craniocervical muscles can also occur but is much less common.
Depressive illness. An increased rate of recurrent major depression has been reported in individuals with a TOR1A pathogenic variant with or without dystonia [Heiman et al 2004].
Neuroimaging
Neuropathology. Very few brains of individuals with DYT1 dystonia have been examined. One study found that nigral dopaminergic neurons appeared larger [Rostasy et al 2003]; another study of four brains found perinuclear inclusion bodies in the midbrain reticular formation and periaqueductal gray matter [McNaught et al 2004]. A recent study on seven brains from individuals with the TOR1A
c.907_909delGAG pathogenic variant (5 unaffected individuals and 2 affected individuals) did not identify any perinuclear inclusions or other abnormalities [Paudel et al 2014].
Genotype-Phenotype Correlations
No genotype-phenotype correlations exist.
Penetrance
The penetrance of the c.907_909delGAG
TOR1A pathogenic variant is approximately 30%. Thus, on average, 30% of individuals who inherit the disease-causing allele develop DYT1 dystonia and 70% do not.
The clinical variability of DYT1 dystonia is great; an affected individual may be more or less severely affected than the parent from whom the disease-causing allele was inherited. Clinical heterogeneity within a single family is exemplified by the report of a family with one individual with writer's cramp and another with severe dystonic storm [Opal et al 2002].
Nomenclature
A naming system that combines the "DYT" designation (to indicate the main clinical feature) and the name of the (confirmed) gene or chromosome locus has been proposed [Marras et al 2012] and now recommended as new nomenclature for genetic movement disorders [Marras et al 2016]. The new designation for DYT1 isolated dystonia using this system is DYT-TOR1A.
Terms used for DYT1 isolated dystonia in the past include the following:
Prevalence
DYT1 dystonia is a common form of early-onset isolated dystonia [Ozelius et al 1997].
DYT1 dystonia is estimated to account for approximately 16% to 53% of early-onset dystonia in non-Jews and approximately 80% to 90% in Ashkenazi Jews [reviewed in Ozelius & Bressman 2011]. Because a minority of isolated dystonia is early onset, the rate of DYT1 dystonia as a percentage of all isolated dystonia is low (i.e., adult-onset focal dystonia is far more common) [Grundmann et al 2003, Elia et al 2006, Lin et al 2006].
The prevalence of early-onset dystonia in Ashkenazi Jews is estimated at 1:3000-1:9000; because of the reduced penetrance (i.e., 30%), the carrier frequency for the TOR1A pathogenic variant is estimated to be 1:1000-1:3000 [Risch et al 1995]. Among non-Jews, the prevalence is lower.
The increased prevalence in Ashkenazim is the result of a founder variant that appeared approximately 350 years ago [Risch et al 1995].
Differential Diagnosis
In studies of individuals with different forms of dystonia (see Dystonia Overview) and unclassified movement disorders, a high proportion of those individuals with the typical phenotype (early-onset isolated dystonia starting in limb and then generalizing) have the TOR1A
c.907_909delGAG deletion [Kamm et al 1999, Klein et al 1999, Ozelius & Bressman 2011].
Dopa-responsive dystonia (GCH1), DYT6 (THAP1) dystonia, and DYT25 (GNAL) dystonia [Fuchs et al 2013] can cause clinical phenotypes similar to that of DYT1 dystonia.
Other, as-yet unidentified genetic forms of autosomal dominant early-onset dystonia also exist [Valente et al 2001, Fasano et al 2006].
Early-onset isolated dystonia can also be inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. Biallelic pathogenic variants in HPCA have been identified in individuals with this form of dystonia [Charlesworth et al 2015].
The following findings tend to exclude a diagnosis of DYT1 dystonia [Bressman et al 1997, Bressman & Greene 2000, Albanese et al 2006]:
Onset in adulthood (especially age >40 years)
Isolated focal or segmental cervical-cranial dystonia, including:
Spasmodic torticollis (cervical dystonia)
Spasmodic dysphonia (laryngeal dystonia resulting in either broken and strangled or breathy speech)
Blepharospasm (involuntary eye closure), which may also include contractions of other facial muscles
Oromandibular dystonia (the jaw is held open or shut)
Dramatic improvement with levodopa therapy suggests the diagnosis of
dopa-responsive dystonia (DRD). DRD is an early-onset form of dystonia caused primarily by heterozygous mutation of
GCH1. Individuals with DRD have near-resolution of symptoms with low-dose levodopa. Another cause of early-onset dystonia that responds to levodopa is juvenile-onset Parkinson disease caused by biallelic pathogenic variants in
PRKN (
PARK2) (see
Parkin Type of Early-Onset Parkinson Disease).
Abnormal brain CT examination or MRI examination
Additional abnormalities on neurologic examination. Findings other than dystonia are indicative of a combined rather than isolated dystonia. Combined dystonia can be due to a genetic or acquired etiology (see
Dystonia Overview).
A history that suggests an acquired cause of dystonia, such as exposure to neuroleptics or other dopamine-blocking drugs (tardive dystonia), perinatal ischemia/injury, stroke, cerebral trauma, or encephalitis
Presence of inconsistent weakness, non-physiologic sensory findings, or incongruous movements that suggest a psychogenic basis.
Management
Evaluations Following Initial Diagnosis
To establish the extent of disease and needs in an individual diagnosed with DYT1 early-onset isolated dystonia, the following evaluations are recommended:
Thorough history, including family history
General physical examination
Neurologic examination. The standard scale used to measure the clinical extent of dystonia is the Burke-Fahn-Marsden rating scale.
If evidence of psychiatric problems (especially depression) exist, consideration of psychiatric assessment
Consultation with a clinical geneticist and/or genetic counselor
Consideration of occupational and/or physical therapy evaluation
Treatment of Manifestations
Treatment is aimed at relieving symptoms [Albanese et al 2011, Lubarr & Bressman 2011, Bertucco & Sanger 2015, Dressler et al 2016, Shanker & Bressman 2016].
Oral medications are usually tried first:
Anticholinergics (e.g., trihexyphenidyl)
Trihexyphenidyl can be titrated to high doses (in the range of 100 mg/day) in children, who tend to tolerate high doses better than adults.
Anticholinergic side effects, particularly cognitive effects, must be monitored closely. Pyridostigmine can be used to counter anticholinergic side effects, but does not improve cognitive side effects.
Baclofen (Lioresal®)
Benzodiazepines
Other medications including levodopa, antiepileptics, and dopamine-depleting agents; these have been used to treat dystonia with variable effects.
Botulinum toxin injections directly into dystonic muscles are generally the treatment of choice for adult-onset focal dystonias. For individuals with more widespread dystonia in whom specific muscle groups produce disabling symptoms, such injections may also be helpful and are often used in combination with oral medications.
If medications fail
Prevention of Secondary Complications
Aggressive medical and surgical intervention including regular follow up for adjustment of medicines and timely referral for GPi DBS surgery when indicated is appropriate in order to prevent long-term orthopedic complications such as joint contractures or spine deformities. However, little systematic data support or negate the use of this approach.
Surveillance
Follow up several times a year with a neurologist specializing in movement disorders is recommended (especially if there is progression) to prevent secondary complications, although little information regarding the benefit of this approach is available.
Individuals treated with GPi DBS surgery require regular follow up, more frequent in the first year after surgery, for programming of the stimulation parameters and monitoring of battery life.
Agents/Circumstances to Avoid
The extremities affected by dystonia should not be placed in a brace or cast, unless medically necessary, as this can worsen the dystonia.
Evaluation of Relatives at Risk
See Genetic Counseling for issues related to testing of at-risk relatives for genetic counseling purposes.
Therapies Under Investigation
RNA interference (RNAi) has been used in cell culture systems overexpressing the mutated torsin protein to block aggregate formation and restore normal distribution of wild type torsin-1A (torsinA) [Kock et al 2006], suggesting a possible future role for RNAi in DYT1 therapy.
Search ClinicalTrials.gov in the US and EU Clinical Trials Register in Europe for access to information on clinical studies for a wide range of diseases and conditions. Note: There may not be clinical trials for this disorder.
Genetic Counseling
Genetic counseling is the process of providing individuals and families with
information on the nature, mode(s) of inheritance, and implications of genetic disorders to help them
make informed medical and personal decisions. The following section deals with genetic
risk assessment and the use of family history and genetic testing to clarify genetic
status for family members; it is not meant to address all personal, cultural, or
ethical issues that may arise or to substitute for consultation with a genetics
professional. —ED.
Mode of Inheritance
DYT1 early-onset isolated dystonia (DYT1 dystonia) is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner with reduced penetrance and broad clinical variability.
Risk to Family Members
Parents of a proband
Most individuals diagnosed with DYT1 dystonia inherited a
TOR1A
c.907_909delGAG deletion from a parent who may or may not have clinical features of the disorder (~70% of individuals who have the deletion are asymptomatic).
It is appropriate to offer molecular genetic testing to both parents of an affected individual to determine if either has the
c.907_909delGAG deletion in
TOR1A.
Although most individuals diagnosed with DYT1 dystonia have a parent who has the
c.907_909delGAG deletion in
TOR1A, the family history may appear to be negative because of reduced penetrance (many parents are asymptomatic) or failure to recognize the disorder in family members with mild clinical features (i.e., writer's cramp only).
Sibs of a proband
The risk to the sibs of an affected person depends on the genetic status of the proband's parents.
If a parent has the c.907_909delGAG deletion in
TOR1A, the risk to sibs of inheriting the deletion is 50%. The penetrance for the deletion is approximately 30%. Thus, on average, 30% of individuals who inherit the c.907_909delGAG deletion in
TOR1A develop dystonia and 70% do not develop dystonia. The clinical variability is great, and an affected individual may be more or less severely affected than the parent who transmitted the deletion (see
Penetrance).
If the c.907_909delGAG deletion in TOR1A is not detected in the leukocyte DNA of either parent, the risk to sibs is slightly greater than that of the general population (though still <1%) because of the possibility of parental germline mosaicism. No instances of germline mosaicism have been reported, although it remains a possibility.
Offspring of a proband
Other family members. The risk to other family members depends on the status of the proband's parents: if a parent has a c.907_909delGAG deletion in TOR1A, his or her family members are at risk.
Prenatal Testing and Preimplantation Genetic Testing
Once the TOR1A
c.907_909delGAG deletion has been identified in an affected family member, prenatal testing for a pregnancy at increased risk and preimplantation genetic testing (PGT) for DYT1 dystonia are possible. The presence of the TOR1A deletion detected by prenatal testing or PGT does not predict whether individuals will be symptomatic, or, if they are, what the age of onset or severity of the disorder will be.
Resources
GeneReviews staff has selected the following disease-specific and/or umbrella
support organizations and/or registries for the benefit of individuals with this disorder
and their families. GeneReviews is not responsible for the information provided by other
organizations. For information on selection criteria, click here.
Dystonia Medical Research Foundation
Phone: 312-755-0198; 800-377-DYST (3978)
Email: dystonia@dystonia-foundation.org
Dystonia UK
United Kingdom
Email: info@dystonia.org.uk
Norton & Elaine Sarnoff Center for Jewish Genetics
Phone: 312-357-4718
Email: jewishgenetics@juf.org
Global Dystonia Registry
Dystonia Medical Research Foundation
Email: Coordinator@globaldystoniaregistry.org
Molecular Genetics
Information in the Molecular Genetics and OMIM tables may differ from that elsewhere in the GeneReview: tables may contain more recent information. —ED.
Table A.
DYT1 Early-Onset Isolated Dystonia: Genes and Databases
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Data are compiled from the following standard references: gene from
HGNC;
chromosome locus from
OMIM;
protein from UniProt.
For a description of databases (Locus Specific, HGMD, ClinVar) to which links are provided, click
here.
Gene structure.
TOR1A comprises five exons. Exon 5 includes a GAGGAG sequence that is highly conserved.
Pathogenic variants. The majority of affected individuals have a 3-bp deletion c.907_909delGAG involving the highly conserved GAGGAG sequence in exon 5 [Ozelius et al 1997] (for more information, see Table A and Table 2). Other variants have been reported; however, none has been unequivocally associated with disease (Table 2).
Three additional in-frame deletions have been reported:
An 18-bp deletion (
c.966_983del18) identified in a family with individuals with dystonia and myoclonus who were subsequently found to have a pathogenic variant in
SGCE, the gene that causes
myoclonus-dystonia, casting doubt on the role of the 18-bp deletion in causing symptoms [
Leung et al 2001]
A 4-bp deletion (
c.934_937delAGAG), found in an unaffected control blood donor who was not examined neurologically [
Kabakci et al 2004], an individual with a complex movement disorder including myoclonus, dystonia, and mild signs of Parkinson disease [
Ritz et al 2009]
In addition, five other novel changes, each identified in a single affected individual and most reported in the ExAC database (see Table 2), have been reported:
A c.863G>A (p.Arg288Gln) variant in an individual with facial palsy and severe fixed dystonia starting in infancy [
Zirn et al 2008]
A c.613T>A (p.Phe205Ile) variant in a male with orobulbar dystonia beginning in his forties [
Calakos et al 2010]
A c.361G>A (p.Glu121Lys) variant in an individual with segmental dystonia including cervical dystonia and spasmodic dysphonia [
Vulinovic et al 2014]
A c.581A>T (p.Asp194Val) variant in an individual age 23 years with cervical dystonia, tremor in both hands and slight spasmodic dysphonia. In addition, this individual has a
THAP1 (
DYT6) variant (c.539T>C; p.Leu180Ser). Each is inherited from one of the parents [
Cheng et al 2014].
A c.385G>A (p.Val129Ile) variant in a Serbian woman age 38 years with adult onset cervical dystonia [
Dobričić et al 2015]
Interestingly, individuals with a disease-modifying p.Asp216His variant in trans configuration with the c.907_909delGAG deletion (i.e., the variants are on different alleles) are largely protected from expression of the disease: disease penetrance is approximately 3% with the p.His216 variant and 35% with the p.Asp216 variant [Risch et al 2007]. Although information regarding these disease-modifying variants may be of interest, associations can rarely be used to direct patient care, and thus clinical genetic testing for these variants is not recommended.
Table 2.
TOR1A Variants Discussed in This GeneReview
View in own window
Variant Classification | DNA Nucleotide Change | Predicted Protein Change | Reference Sequences |
---|
Disease modifier
| c.646G>C | p.Asp216His |
NM_000113.2
NP_000104.1
|
Uncertain clinical significance
| c.40_45delGCGCCG 1 | p.Ala14_Pro15del |
c.361G>A 1 | p.Glu121Lys |
c.385G>A 1 | p.Val129Ile |
c.581A>T | p.Asp194Val |
c.613T>A 1 | p.Phe205Ile |
c.863G>A 1 | p.Arg288Gln |
c.934_937delAGAG | p.Arg312PhefsTer14 |
c.966_983del18 1 | p.Phe323_Tyr328del |
Pathogenic
| c.907_909delGAG 1 | p.Glu303del |
Variants listed in the table have been provided by the authors. GeneReviews staff have not independently verified the classification of variants.
GeneReviews follows the standard naming conventions of the Human Genome Variation Society (varnomen.hgvs.org). See Quick Reference for an explanation of nomenclature.
- 1.
Normal gene product. The protein torsin-1A comprises 332 amino acids. It has an ATP-binding domain and a putative N-terminal leader sequence. It is a member of a superfamily of ATPases, with particular homology to heat shock proteins, and is ubiquitous, with particularly intense expression in the substantia nigra, dopamine neurons, cerebellar Purkinje cells, thalamus, globus pallidus, hippocampal formation, and cerebral cortex [Augood et al 1998, Augood et al 2003]. Torsin-1A is expressed in at least four brain regions beginning between age four and eight weeks [Siegert et al 2005].
Torsin-1A shuttles between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the nuclear envelope (NE) [Goodchild & Dauer 2004, Naismith et al 2004, Hewett et al 2006]. In the ER, it plays a role in endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation (ERAD) making cells less sensitive to ER stress [Nery et al 2011]. Torsin-1A also localizes to neurite varicosities and vesicles, and along neuronal processes and may play a role in dopamine release and metabolism as well as tyrosine hydroxylase activity [Ledoux et al 2013, Rose et al 2015]. Torsin-1A has recently been found in large ribonucleoprotein granules, where it is thought to play a role in delivering messenger RNAs to synapses [Jokhi et al 2013]. In addition, torsin-1A is involved in cytoskeletal dynamics that may be important for neurite extensions during brain development [Kamm et al 2004, Hewett et al 2006, Hewett et al 2007, Nery et al 2008, Naismith et al 2009].
Abnormal gene product. The common c.907_909delGAG deletion results in the loss of one of two of glutamic acid residues in a conserved region of the torsin-1A protein. In cell cultures, overexpressed mutated torsin-1A forms spheroid inclusions usually flanking the nucleus and deriving from ER or nuclear membrane. The significance of these inclusions is unclear because they have not been found in postmortem brain samples of individuals with DYT1 [Bragg et al 2004].
Knock-in, knockout, and knockdown mouse models, a drosophila knockout model, as well as cellular studies support a loss-of-function mechanism in DYT1 dystonia resulting from a dominant-negative effect [Caldwell et al 2013, Richter & Richter 2014, Rose et al 2015]. Both knock-in and knockout mice homozygous for the c.907_909delGAG deletion die at birth with seemingly normal morphology, but showing post-migratory neurons with abnormal nuclear membranes [Goodchild et al 2005]. Mutated torsin-1A appears to destabilize the wild-type protein, causing premature degradation not only through the macroautophagy pathway but also by the proteasome [Giles et al 2008, Giles et al 2009].
References
Published Guidelines / Consensus Statements
Committee on Bioethics, Committee on Genetics, and American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics Social, Ethical, Legal Issues Committee. Ethical and policy issues in genetic testing and screening of children. Available
online. 2013. Accessed 2-17-22.
National Society of Genetic Counselors. Position statement on genetic testing of minors for adult-onset conditions. Available
online. 2018. Accessed 2-17-22.
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Chapter Notes
Author History
Susan B Bressman, MD; Albert Einstein College of Medicine (1999-2014)
Deborah de Leon, MS; Beth Israel Medical Center (1999-2005)
Naomi Lubarr, MD (2014-present)
Laurie Ozelius, PhD (2014-present)
Deborah Raymond, MS; Beth Israel Medical Center (2005-2014)
Revision History
17 November 2016 (sw) Comprehensive update posted live
2 January 2014 (me) Comprehensive update posted live
23 November 2010 (cd) Revision: corrected mutation nomenclature: c.904_906delGAG → c.907_909delGAG
1 July 2008 (me) Comprehensive update posted live
31 August 2006 (cd) Revision: TOR1A mutations other than 3-bp deletion may cause DYT1; clinical testing available for such mutations
5 April 2005 (me) Comprehensive update posted live
21 January 2003 (me) Comprehensive update posted live
14 April 1999 (pb) Review posted live
2 December 1998 (ddl) Original submission