Curation FAME6 TNRC6A

Gene TNRC6A
Disease FAME6
Inheritance AD
Score

2.5 + 0.2 = 2.7 / 18

Genetic + experimental = total
Classification
0
18
Refuted
Moderate
Definitive
Last Updated 08/14/2025
Pubs Reviewed 1
Publication Span
Publication Interval
Curator(s) Macayla Weiner, Laurel Hiatt, Harriet Dashnow
Description

FAME6/BAFME6 is an autosomal dominant familial adult myoclonic epilepsy phenotype associated with noncoding TTTCA and TTTTA repeat expansions in TNRC6A. PMID:29507423 identified TNRC6A expansions in one BAFME family (F9283), confirmed the repeat configuration by RP-PCR and Southern blot, and reported co-segregation in five affected individuals and one unaffected individual. TTTCA-repeat expansions in TNRC6A were absent from 1,000 control subjects, while TTTTA-only expansions were observed rarely in controls, supporting the TTTCA-containing expanded allele as the disease-relevant motif.

Genetic evidence

Total: 2.5

Category
Type
Citation
Score
Details
Singular Evidence
Probands
1.5

One unrelated BAFME6 family (F9283) with five affected individuals carried TNRC6A TTTCA/TTTTA repeat expansions; the expanded allele was validated by RP-PCR and Southern blot and co-segregated with disease.

Collective Evidence
Allele
1

TNRC6A TTTCA-repeat expansions were absent in 1,000 controls and in patients with SAMD12 expansions; TTTTA-only expansions occurred rarely in controls, supporting the TTTCA-containing expanded motif as disease-relevant.

Experimental evidence

Total: 0.2

Category
Type
Citation
Score
Details
Function
Regulatory impact
0.2

In the supplementary materials of pmid:29507423 RNA-seq data from control brains show that TNRC6A is transcribed with spliced transcripts flanking the repeat, and RT-PCR confirms expression in brain and other tissues; however, no differential expression or regulatory effect of the repeat expansion is demonstrated. Downgraded score to 0.2 as the evidence does not assess the impact of the expansion on gene function.

Maximum score caps apply at evidence type, category, and supercategory levels, so section totals may be lower than the raw sum of row scores.