Curation HSAN-VIII PRDM12
5 + 6 = 11 / 18
Genetic evidence
Total: 5
Category | Type | Citation | Score | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular Evidence | Probands | 2.5 | Two unrelated families carried homozygous PRDM12 polyalanine expansions. Family A had five affected individuals (P1–P5) with expansion from 12 to 19 alanines, identified after autozygosity mapping and PRDM12 sequencing. Family J had two affected individuals (P17–P18) with a homozygous 18-alanine repeat expansion and a milder CIP/HSAN phenotype. Total TR-specific evidence: 7 affected individuals from 2 unrelated families. | |
Collective Evidence | Computational | 1 | PRDM12 polyalanine tract length was polymorphic in 176 general-population individuals but did not exceed 14 alanines, whereas affected families carried 18- and 19-alanine alleles. The authors considered these expansions exceptional and likely deleterious based on rarity and comparison with other pathogenic polyalanine expansion disorders. | |
Collective Evidence | Segregation | 1.5 | Segregation evidence overlaps with proband evidence for the same two TR-specific families. The paper reports recessive segregation of PRDM12 mutations across all 11 families and asymptomatic heterozygous carriers, but the TR-specific segregation evidence is based on the same families already counted under Probands. |
Experimental evidence
Total: 6
Category | Type | Citation | Score | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Function | Biochemical function | 0.5 | PRDM12 is a PRDM-family transcriptional/epigenetic regulator with a PR/SET-related domain, zinc fingers, and a C-terminal polyalanine tract. Wild-type Prdm12 induced H3K9 dimethylation, supporting a biochemical role in histone modification during sensory neurogenesis. | |
Function | Protein interaction | 0.5 | Gene-level evidence: PRDM12 recruits the histone methyltransferase G9a/EHMT2 to mediate H3K9 dimethylation, and the p.His289Leu mutant significantly reduced Prdm12-G9a interaction. This protein-interaction evidence is PRDM12 gene-level and not specific to the polyalanine repeat expansion. | |
Function | Regulatory impact | 1 | Human cell/tissue evidence showed PRDM12 induction during iPSC- and hESC-derived nociceptor-like neuron differentiation and detection in adult human dorsal root ganglia. CIP-associated PRDM12 mutants impaired H3K9 dimethylation, supporting altered epigenetic regulatory function relevant to nociceptor development. | |
Functional Alteration | Patient cells | 1 | Patient tissue studies showed sensory neuron pathology: sural nerve biopsies from affected individuals showed severe loss of small-caliber myelinated Aδ fibers, and skin biopsies showed absent intraepidermal nerve fiber crossing with markedly reduced CGRP-positive nociceptive fibers. | |
Functional Alteration | Non-patient cells | 0.5 | In transfected COS-7 and HEK-293T cells, PRDM12 polyalanine expansion mutants showed reduced protein levels and nuclear/cytoplasmic aggregation; expression was recovered after proteasome inhibition with MG132. | |
Models | Non-human model organism | 2 | Xenopus Prdm12 knockdown caused abnormal expression of cranial sensory placode markers Ath3, Ebf3, and Islet1, supporting a conserved role for Prdm12 in sensory neurogenesis. Mouse embryo studies showed Prdm12 expression in neural folds and dorsal root ganglia during sensory neuron development. | |
Models | Cell culture | 1 | Human iPSC- and hESC-derived nociceptor-like neuron differentiation models showed strong PRDM12 induction during neural crest/sensory neuron specification; mature cells showed nociceptor-associated marker expression and tetrodotoxin-resistant sodium currents. |