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European Journal of Human Genetics (2023)
Hereditary spinocerebellar degenerations (SCDs) is an umbrella term that covers a group of monogenic conditions that share common pathogenic mechanisms and include hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP), cerebellar ataxia, and spinocerebellar ataxia. They are often complicated with axonal neuropathy and/or intellectual impairment and overlap with many neurological conditions, including neurodevelopmental disorders. More than 200 genes and loci inherited through all modes of Mendelian inheritance are known. Autosomal recessive inheritance predominates in consanguineous communities; however, autosomal dominant and X-linked inheritance can also occur. Sudan is inhabited by genetically diverse populations, yet it has high consanguinity rates. We used next-generation sequencing, genotyping, bioinformatics analysis, and candidate gene approaches to study 90 affected patients from 38 unrelated Sudanese families segregating multiple forms of SCDs. The age-at-onset in our cohort ranged from birth to 35 years; however, most patients manifested childhood-onset diseases (the mean and median ages at onset were 7.5 and 3 years, respectively). We reached the genetic diagnosis in 63% and possibly up to 73% of the studied families when considering variants of unknown significance. Combining the present data with our previous analysis of 25 Sudanese HSP families, the success rate reached 52–59% (31–35/59 families). In this article we report candidate variants in genes previously known to be associated with SCDs or other phenotypically related monogenic disorders. We also highlight the genetic and clinical heterogeneity of SCDs in Sudan, as we did not identify a major causative gene in our cohort, and the potential for discovering novel SCD genes in this population.
Hereditary forms of spastic paraplegia (HSP), cerebellar ataxia, and spinocerebellar ataxia are distinct but overlapping clinical entities caused by related mechanisms that encompass a continuum of phenotypes [1,2,3]. We refer hereafter to these disorders as hereditary spinocerebellar degenerations (SCDs).
SCDs are characterized clinically by ataxia and/or spasticity complicated, in some cases, by other neurological or extra-neurological manifestations [1, 2]. They have more than 220 subtypes that afflict ~1:10,000 individuals worldwide with evident phenotypic and genetic heterogeneity and clinical overlap with other neurogenetic conditions such as intellectual disabilities, motor neuron diseases, encephalopathies, or neurodevelopmental disorders [4, 5]. The advent of next-generation sequencing (NGS) has markedly boosted SCDs diagnosis in recent years by the identification of a multitude of causative mutations in a large variety of disease-causing genes [4]. Dysfunction of mitochondria, ion channels, and cellular metabolism are the main altered functions by the pathogenic variants in these genes in addition to the abnormal expansions of nucleotide repeats [4].
Sudan is an East-African country with complex genetic and population structures [6]. This complexity stemmed from the linguistic and cultural differences between its ethnic groups acting in parallel with other, sometimes opposing, population genetic forces, e.g., consanguinity, admixture, and migration [6,7,8,9]. For instance, 67% of marriages in some parts of the country are consanguineous (42% first-degree cousins and 25% fifth-degree consanguinity and above) [10].
In a previous study, we screened 25 Sudanese families with HSP for mutations in 68 HSP genes using NGS targeted gene panel and reached a genetic diagnosis in 28% of these families [11]. In the current study, we investigated 38 novel Sudanese families with SCDs using a combination of candidate gene approaches, NGS targeted gene panel screening, and whole-exome sequencing (WES). We documented the studied patients’ clinical presentations and compared the diagnostic utility of the approaches in the two studies.
We included a total of 90 patients from 38 Sudanese families in this study with the following inclusion criteria:
Patients presenting with symptoms, signs, and/or history suggestive of SCD.
Non-genetic causes that can mimic neurological illnesses that resemble SCD due to pregnancy- or birth-related insults, as well as toxic exposures, have been excluded through interview of the family members. MRI, when available, excluded tumor or compressions of CNS structures.
Participants from the family (patients and at least two healthy subjects) or their guardian (in the case of participants below 18 years old or patients with intellectual disabilities), agreed to participate in the study. We also examined and samples healthy subjects such as the parents, siblings, second-degree relatives, and/or third-degree relatives, in priority order depending on their availability, in order to help in the variant filtering. They had to be older than patients’ age at disease onset.
Sudanese by descent.
Presence of multiple cases affected in the same family, or sporadic case from a consanguineous marriage, to increase the probability to identify genetic causes.
Four out of the 38 families were screened in our previous study without reaching a genetic diagnosis [11]. Index cases were recruited from multiple neurology and pediatrics neurology clinics in Khartoum, the capital of Sudan that gather most tertiary hospitals and specialized clinics in the country. Most families originated from outside the city. Patients and families were interviewed and examined at the Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Medicine, University of Khartoum, Sudan; the Pediatric Neurology Clinics, Soba University Hospital, Sudan; or the families’ residences in the capital of Sudan, Khartoum, or other Sudanese cities. The diagnosis protocol followed the EUROSPA/SPATAX clinical criteria (https://spatax.wordpress.com/downloads/). We collected 2 ml of saliva from the patients and healthy-related subjects using Oragene®•DNA (OG-500 and OG-575) kits (DNA Genotek Inc., Ottawa, ON, Canada).
In this study, most families were studied using more than one diagnostic modality. We used various combinations of different genetic approaches, including NGS targeted gene panel screening, WES, candidate gene approach, and array genotyping (Fig. 1A). Initially, our experimental design was to screen the patients for mutations in selected genes depending on their phenotypes and to subsequently perform WES in negative cases. Later, with the drop in the costs of WES, we skipped the screening steps, except in patients with suspected repeat expansions based on clinical and inheritance data. Array genotyping was mainly used for homozygosity mapping and detection of copy number variations (CNVs). The presence of CNVs was also tested through coverage analysis in NGS data (gene panel and WES). Twenty-six families were investigated initially using HSP-targeted NGS gene panel (HSP panel) screening. Of these, eleven families were further investigated using WES and eight using WES and array genotyping. Eleven other families were directly investigated using WES, without HSP panel screening. Candidate gene approach was used in three families, two that were screened for repeat expansion-associated autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxias, and one for Friedreich’s ataxia repeat expansion.
Genetic tools used for investigating our families and their utility (A) and the geographical origin of the families (B). A More than one genetic diagnostic approach was used in 23 out of 38 families, including all the undiagnosed families. Twenty-six families were investigated initially using HSP-targeted NGS gene panel (HSP panel) screening. Of these, eleven families were further investigated using WES and eight using WES and array genotyping. Eleven other families were directly investigated using WES, without HSP panel screening. Candidate gene approach was used in three families, two that were screened for repeat expansion-associated autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxias, and one for Friedreich’s ataxia repeat expansion. Sanger sequencing (not shown) was used for testing the segregation of all the identified candidate variants, except repeats expansion variants. HSP panel, hereditary spastic paraplegia next-generation sequencing targeted gene panel; WES, whole-exome sequencing. The families partially diagnosed relate to families where only a fraction of the patients was diagnosed. The numbers on the y-axis indicate the number of families; the filled circles indicate the used genetic tool. B The figure shows regions, states, or cities in Sudan from which the studied families originated (each pin-drop represents a single family).
We extracted DNA from saliva following the prepIT®.L2P manual protocol provided by the manufacturer (DNA Genotek). DNA quantity (Absorbance at 260 nm) and quality (check of the high molecular weight DNA, absorbance ratio 260/280 and 260/320) were checked using a NanoDrop spectrophotometer (Thermo Scientific, Wilmington, DE, USA), a Qubit® fluorometer (Promega, Madison, WI, USA), and standard agarose gel electrophoresis.
Fifty µl of patients’ DNA solution at a concentration of 50 ng per dl were sent for NGS panel screening at the genotyping and sequencing core facility of the Paris Brain Institute – ICM, Paris, France. A double capture enrichment strategy was used (Roche NimbleGen® SeqCap® Ez, USA). Sequencing was done on the MiSeq® platform (Illumina, CA, USA). Detailed methodology and bioinformatics analysis are available in previous reports [11, 12]. We systematically searched for point variations and genomic rearrangements. We targeted a median depth coverage > 100, and variants affecting positions with coverage < 30 were reanalyzed by Sanger sequencing if located in convincing causative genes based on the clinical presentation and inheritance mode.
Twenty µl of DNA solution at a concentration of 20 ng per dl were sent for WES at the genotyping and sequencing core facility of the Paris Brain Institute – ICM, Paris, France. Exons were captured on the genomic DNA using the SeqCap® EZ MedExome Kit (Roche, IN, USA), followed by massively parallel sequencing on a Novaseq® 6000 sequencer (Illumina, CA, USA). Except for aligning reads to the hg37 version of the human genome (NCBI) using Burrows-Wheeler Aligner software, we processed exome data up to the calling of variants using the Genome AnalysisToolkit software (GATK) following the GATK4 best-practice pipeline.
We annotated and prioritized variants using software included in VarAFT annotation and filter tool [13]. Data analysis and variants filtration were carried out based on the minor allele frequency, the variant’s effect, and in silico prediction. We filtered all variants with allele frequencies < 0.0001 in the GnomAD genome database. First, we examined variants with predicted major structural effects; nonsense, stop loss, frameshift, and canonical splice site variants. After checking for loss of function variants, we examined missense variants annotated as pathogenic by Sift and Polyphen software [14, 15] and non-frame-shift variants. To verify that we had not missed strong candidate variants due to our conservative frequency filter, we repeated the analysis using a frequency cut-off of 0.001 in the GnomAD genome database. In this study, we focused the analysis to Online Inheritance in Man (OMIM) disease-related genes (https://www.omim.org/) and recently published ataxia or HSP-causative genes with strong evidence from the literature. When multiple affected relatives were processed from the same family, they were analyzed together according to the suspected inheritance mode and then individually to take into account possible phenocopies. Genomic rearrangements were tested using PennCNV-1.0.5 [16].
Primers were designed using Primer3 Plus software [17]. DNA was amplified on a GeneAmp® PCR System 9700 (Thermo Fisher, MA, USA). We checked the quantity and quality of PCR products, including product size and off-target amplification, using the Caliper®LabChip GX System and its related software (PerkinElmer, MA, USA) according to the manufacturer’s protocol. Sanger sequencing was then done at the labs of Eurofins Genomics (Germany) using the Big Dye Chemistry in an ABI3730 automated sequencer (Applied Biosystems, Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA) using the procedures recommended by the manufacturer on the PCR product. Sequencing files (ABI format) were then visualized and analyzed using Sequence Scanner Software® v2.0 (Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA).
Two hundred nanograms of genomic DNA from participating members of the families F5, F41, F54, F65, F70, F73, F74, F75, F80, F81, and F85 were sent for genotyping at the Pitié-Salpêtrière Post-Genomic Platform (P3S), Paris, France. Genotyping was performed on Illumina Infinium OmniExpress-24vl-3-A1 array, which contained ~ 710,000 SNP markers. Raw data were analyzed at the P3S platform using GenomeStudio™ Software. Runs of homozygosity were performed using version 1.07 of Plink software [18] to prioritize the variants in WES analysis. Candidate pathogenic copy number variants (CNV) were searched using PennCNV-1.0.5 software [16].
Genomic DNA from patients with clinical presentations and pedigree structures suggestive of dominant spinocerebellar ataxias (F49 and F65) or Friedreich’s ataxia (F38) were screened for repeats expansion using specific PCR-based approaches at the genetics departments of the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital and University Hospital of Montpellier, France, respectively. From the dominant spinocerebellar ataxias, we screened for pathogenic DNA repeat expansions in the SCA genes ATXN1 (SCA1), ATXN2 (SCA2), ATXN3 (SCA3), CACNA1A (SCA6), ATXN7 (SCA7), TBP (SCA17), and ATN1 (DRPLA) using a multiplex PCR amplification followed by capillary electrophoresis in a 3730 ABI sequencer (Applied Biosystems). The FRDA gene-associated repeat was amplified by a repeat-primed PCR approach.
We studied 38 families (90 sampled affected patients), each including at least one patient manifesting features of SCDs. The studied families originated from multiple regions in Sudan, though the distribution is markedly skewed towards the central parts of the country. More than one-fifth of the families (23.6%) originated from a single state in central Sudan, the River Nile state (Fig. 1B). The number of affected males and females in our cohort was approximately equal (53% males vs. 47% females). However, the patients’ age at examination distribution was less homogenous; most patients were less than 18 years old. The mean and median patients’ ages-at-examination were 17.24 (SD = 13.97) and 14.5 years, respectively (Fig. 2B).
A Patients’ age-at-examination. The mean age-at-examination was 17.2 years. B Age-at-onset of the SCDs in our patients. The mean age-at-onset was 7.54 years. C Signs detected during patients’ examination. The percentages of patients with pyramidal and cerebellar signs are shown. The majority of our patients presented with pyramidal features. D Features complicating the SCDs phenotype in our cohort. Skeletal deformities, intellectual impairment, and developmental delay and/or regression are the most common features complicating the SCDs phenotype in our cohort.
Most patients had an early-onset disease; the mean and median ages-at-onset were 7.44 (SD = 9.11) and three years, respectively (Fig. 2A). Most of the patients in our cohort had spasticity (70%). Limb ataxia was noted only in ~30% of the patients, while ocular cerebellar signs were noted in 20% (Fig. 2C). A pure SCDs phenotype was noted in ~14% of the patients, nine presented with a pure HSP while four presented with pure cerebellar ataxia. The most common features complicating the SCD phenotype in our patients were skeletal deformities, developmental delay or regression, and intellectual impairment (Fig. 2D). Table 1 summarizes the clinical presentation and the genetic diagnosis in each family where appropriate, and detailed phenotype of all the patients in our cohort are available per patient in the Supplementary Table. The diversity of clinical association did not allow us to distinguish a frequent phenotype that could have been analyzed separately as a whole. However, several families presented with similar clinical presentations, such as families F63 and F84, but they finally appeared to segregate mutations in different genes.
When focusing the analysis on known genes involved in neurogenetic conditions, we reached a genetic diagnosis in 63% (24/38) of the studied families, possibly 73% (28/38) if including families with variants of uncertain significance (VUS). In most of these families (23/28, 82%), diagnosis concerned all patients of the family that could be tested. The candidate variants in the families F41, F85, F54, F70, and F80 were not identified in all the patients within the family (Table 2 and the Supplementary material). This partial segregation was probably due to the high consanguinity rate that concentrated several disease-causing mutations or non-genetic phenocopies in the same family.
The pattern of inheritance in most of the possibly diagnosed families was an autosomal recessive pattern in 24 of them (Fig. 3); of note, F79 was counted in two inheritance modes as it segregated two likely causative variants with different patterns of inheritance but both possibly contributing to the phenotype as we reported previously [19]). Most autosomal recessive families were segregating homozygous variants (75%), while compound heterozygous variants were observed in 11%. Autosomal dominant inheritance was identified in 11% of the families, and two families showed X-linked inheritance (Fig. 3).
Compound heterozygous inheritance is separated from homozygous autosomal recessive inheritance to highlight the effect of consanguinity. One family, F79, was counted in two inheritance modes as it segregated two likely causative variants with different patterns of inheritance but both possibly contributing to the phenotype as we reported previously (Ref. 19).
We identified 31 different variants in known disease genes in this study (Table 3): 26 causative or likely causative variants in 24 families and five variants of unknown significance (VUS) in four families. One variant in FA2H, NM_024306.5:c.674 T > C (p.Leu225Pro), was identified twice in families F61 and F68 who shared a related phenotype. Most of the variants we identified were missense variants (12/31, 39%), followed in frequency by splice-site (23%) and frameshift (19%) variants. We identified pathogenic repeat expansions in two families and nonsense variants in three families. Array genotyping didn’t detect candidate CNV or chromosomal rearrangements. Each variant was validated by VariantValidator version 2.1.1 and classified by the authors after evaluating the entire clinical situation (Supplementary table), segregation analysis (Supplementary material) and the ACMG 2015 classification (Table 3).
Approximately eighty percent of the candidate single nucleotide and insertion/deletion variants located in known disease genes (23/29, excluding the two nucleotide expansions) were either pathogenic or likely pathogenic, according to the ACMG 2015 guidelines for interpreting sequence variations [20].
Additionally, five likely causative variants fitted to the category of VUS but some with convincing evidence of pathogenicity, however. All the candidate deleterious VUS identified in this cohort segregated with the disease and could fit the categories of pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants if additional evidence is identified in the future. The VUS NM_152778.3:c.753 A > G (p.Glu251Glu), identified in family F67, is a synonymous variant but predicted to alter the splicing of MFSD8 (TraP score 0.96; SpliceAI score 0.7) and cause skipping of exon 8. It was absent from the gnomAD v2.1.1 database and from 120 index cases of Sudanese origin with various neurological conditions. The patient presented with intellectual disability, cerebellar ataxia, and epilepsy (Supplementary Table), a phenotype suggestive of, but not exclusive to, neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis. Furthermore, the patient had cousins who passed away in their early childhood after a similar illness. We considered it as a plausible candidate based on in-silico prediction tools and suggestive phenotype and family history.
The second VUS was in DMXL2, NM_001174116.3:c.5020 A > C (p.Lys1674Gln), and was identified in the two probands from family F66. It is predicted as pathogenic by Sift, Polyphen 2, MutationTaster [21], LRT [22], and Provean [23] and had a CADD score of 28. The variant was not predicted by the Missense3D tool to alter the protein structure, however. On the other hand, the variant was predicted to unmask a splice site inside exon 21 which may affect the mRNA stability and must then be explored in patient’s cells if expressed in leukocytes or fibroblasts. This was not possible, however. Pathogenic mutations in the DMXL2 gene cause the autosomal dominant deafness type 71 (OMIM # 617605), and the autosomal recessive developmental and epileptic encephalopathy type 81 (OMIM # 618663) and polyendocrine-polyneuropathy syndrome (OMIM # 616113) [24,25,26]. We herein, potentially extended the phenotype of DMXL2 mutations to include complex HSP. Details about the clinical presentations of the previous families with DMXL2 variants are provided in the Supplementary material.
The variant NM_001145026.2:c.5893 C > A (p.Pro1965Thr) in PTPRQ was detected in two adult patients from family F85 who presented with congenital deafness and mutism but at different zygosity state. PTPRQ variants have been reports in AR and AD hearing loss with mildly delayed development (MIM # 617663 & 613391). This variant was also predicted as deleterious by Sift, Polyphen 2, MutationTaster, and Provean. It was absent in the gnomAD v2.1.1 database. We considered it as a VUS.
Details about the VUS identified in family F79 in HERC2 and ATP2B3 were provided in a previous report [19].
The Sudanese population is paradoxically characterized by a complex genetic structure and high consanguinity rates [6, 10]. The high level of homozygosity in our cohort was reflected by the predominance of homozygous recessive diseases (75%) and the detection of three established/possible founder variants. Two of these founder variants were in ADAT3 and PRUNE1 genes as we reported previously [19, 27]. The third possible founder variant, NM_024306.5:c.674 T > C (p.Leu225Pro), was in FA2H and was detected in two unrelated families, F61 and F68, that descended from different tribes in Kordofan province, western Sudan. Nevertheless, we also identified autosomal dominant and X-linked (hemizygous) conditions in several families.
Most of our families originated from the central parts of Sudan. This can be attributed either to differences in the accessibility to the health system and our collaborating clinics or genuine differences in the frequency of genetic diseases between central Sudan populations and other Sudanese populations. We favor the first explanation as other consanguinity-linked genetic diseases, such as sickle cell anemia, are common in non-central parts of the country [10].
All age groups were represented in our cohort, particularly those < 18 years, indicating the degree of care provided to this age group by their families. On the other hand, we have patients with childhood-onset diseases who were first examined after their forties (after decades of disease duration, > 40 years in two patients), epitomizing the long-term odysseys of patients with genetic diseases and underlining the importance of genetic diagnosis for patients’ and families’ satisfaction. Also, the percentages of males and females in our cohort were approximately equal, signifying the absence of gender-based inequalities in the accessibility of care and minimizing the contribution of X-linked dominant inheritance to SCDs in our cohort.
Previously, we screened 25 Sudanese families with HSP for mutations in 68 known HSP genes using NGS targeted gene panel [11]. We reached a genetic diagnosis in 28% of these cases [11], a diagnostic rate very similar to Portuguese [28] and European [12] patients. This last study, (ref. 12), showed that combining HSP panel with subsequent WES increased the diagnosis rate up to 50% when focusing on OMIM disease-related genes. WES used to further identify novel genes was shown to give a diagnostic yield of up to 75% [29]. In the current study, by using multiple genetic approaches, we identified disease-causing variants in known SCDs genes in 63–73% of the studied families. The overall diagnostic success rate if we consider our previous cohort (ref 11) is 52–59% (31–35/59 families). Furthermore, extending the analysis to all genes covered by the exome, we identified variants in novel candidate genes in seven out of the ten remaining families (see Tables 1, 2), potentially raising our diagnostic success rate ceiling to 92% instead of 73%. One of those seven novel causative genes has been reported [30] and the others are under validation and will be reported elsewhere (unpublished data). According to the results of our two studies, most of the major autosomal recessive SCDs genes are present in Sudan (SACS, SPG11, FXN) and some of the major dominant ones as well (e.g., SCA3), but there is no single major gene causing SCDs in Sudan. This might result from the position of Sudan in east Africa, at the frontiers between North Africa, the Middle East, and sub-Saharan Africa.
In five families, we could establish the diagnosis in only a portion of the patients or branches since the variants were not segregating in all patients, outlining the need to introduce into the analysis pipeline of Sudanese families an additional step that consists of analyzing the patients individually after excluding the variants shared by multiple patients from the same family.
WES outweighs NGS targeted gene panel in discovering new SCDs genes [4]. However, based on our experience with the Sudanese population, and the experience of others, exome sequencing also significantly outweighs NGS-targeted gene panels in diagnosing known SCDs phenotypes, particularly in complex phenotypes [31]. Furthermore, WES enables the extension of phenotypes previously associated with mutations in certain genes in contrast to conservative NGS-targeted gene panels that target only the phenotype of interest. For instance, we extended the phenotypes associated with mutations in CCDC82 and CCDC88C in the current Sudanese cohort by using WES. CCDC82 was reported previously to cause an intellectual disability syndrome [32, 33]. We expanded the CCDC82-linked phenotype to include spastic paraplegia [19]. Later, another report of a patient of Pakistani origin confirmed that spasticity is part of the CCDC82-linked syndrome [34]. Similarly, we expanded the presentation of heterozygous mutations in CCDC88C to include early-onset pure spastic paraplegia [35]. Before, heterozygous gain-of-function CCDC88C mutations were only associated with spinocerebellar ataxia SCA40 [36]. In this report we also potentially extended the phenotype of DMXL2– and PTPRQ-linked disorders to include complex HSP.
In our opinion, the higher diagnostic success rate of WES overrides its technical difficulties when compared to NGS-targeted gene panel upon studying diseases with overlapping phenotypes like SCDs, particularly when considering the increasing technical feasibility of WES [37]. However, WES is less efficient for rearrangement detection than panels of genes, usually optimized for such discovery, as discussed (ref, 12). An issue in SCDs is the detection of nucleotide repeat expansions that require independent specific techniques but there are improvements of some algorithm for such quest in WES data and in genome sequencing [38].
In conclusion, up-to-now, SCDs in Sudan are caused by multiple genes; none of them significantly predominate over the others. The use of multiple genetic approaches that included WES enhanced the diagnosis of known SCDs phenotypes and the potential discovery of new SCDs genes.
Some details of the participants, including family pedigrees and natural history, have been removed from this report to ensure anonymity and comply with the journal’s standards. Further information on segregation analysis and data supporting the findings of this study are available from the corresponding authors upon reasonable requests. All novel variants and VUS have been submitted to ClinVar (submission number SUB12076628).
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We are grateful to the genotyping and sequencing core facility of the Brain Institute (ICM, Paris, France) and the Pitié-Salpêtrière Post-Genomic Platform (P3S, Paris, France) for doing the next-generation sequencing and array genotyping, respectively. We thank Nicolas Auger, Claire-Sophie Davoine, Mélanie Papin and Lena Guillot-Noel for their advice and Prof. Michel Koenig, Dr. Marine Guillaud-Bataille, and Dr. Guillaume Banneau for their help in nucleotide repeat expansion detection.
This study was financially supported by the European Union (grant n°779257 – Solve-RD from the Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program, to GS), the Association Connaitre les Syndromes Cérébelleux (to GS) and by the ASL-HSP-France patient association (to GS). AY was supported by the Ministry of Higher Education, Sudan and the French Embassy, Sudan. MAS was supported by Researchers Supporting Project, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (project number RSP-2020/38). Open access funding provided by Karolinska Institute.
Faculty of Medicine, University of Khartoum, Khartoum, Sudan
Ashraf Yahia, Ahlam A. A. Hamed, Inaam N. Mohamed, Maha A. Elseed, Sarah M. El-sadig, Mohamed Ahmed Abdullah, Maha Elzubair, Aisha Motwakil Bakhiet, Fatima Abozar, Rawaa Adil, Sara Emad, Mhammed Alhassan Musallam, Eman O. E. Mohamed, Elhami A. A. Ahmed, Esraa Eltaraifee, Amal S. I. Abd Allah, Lina Salah, Omnia M. Tag Elseed, Tasneem E. A. Elhassan, Abubakr Elbashier, Esraa S. A. Alfadul, Moneeb Fadul, Elfatih E. Bushara & Ammar E. Ahmed
Paris Brain Institute – ICM, CNRS UMR7225, INSERM 1127, Sorbonne University, F-75000, Paris, France
Ashraf Yahia & Giovanni Stevanin
Center of Neurodevelopmental Disorders (KIND), Centre for Psychiatry Research, Department of Women’s and Children’s Health, Karolinska Institutet and Stockholm Health Care Services, Region Stockholm, Stockholm, Sweden
Ashraf Yahia
Astrid Lindgren Children’s Hospital, Karolinska University Hospital, Solna, Sweden
Ashraf Yahia
Division of Pediatric Neurology, Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Mustafa A. Salih
College of Medicine, AlMughtaribeen University, Khartoum, Sudan
Mustafa A. Salih
Division of Neurology, Sudan Medical Council, Khartoum, Sudan
Hassab Elrasoul Siddig
Pediatric Neurology Department, Red Cross Memorial Children Hospital (RCWMCH), University of Cape Town (UCT), Cape Town, South Africa
Ali Elsir Musa Nasreldien
Faculty of Medicine, Omdurman Islamic University, Khartoum, Sudan
Farouk Yassen Omer
Sudanese Neurogenetics Research group, Faculty of Medicine, University of Khartoum, Khartoum, Sudan
Rayan Abubaker
National University Biomedical Research Institute, National University, Khartoum, Sudan
Rayan Abubaker
Neurology Department, Hamad Medical Corporation, Doha, Qatar
Isra Z. M. Eltazi
Department of Hematology and Medical Oncology, University of Cincinnati Medical Center, Ohio, USA
Zulfa Omer
Department of Neurology, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, CB2 0QQ, UK
Hiba Malik
Division of Emergency Medicine, Sudan Medical Specialization Board, Khartoum, Sudan
Mayada O. E. Mohamed
Sudan Neuroscience Projects, University of Khartoum, Khartoum, Sudan
Ali A. Elhassan
Department of Molecular Neuroscience, Graduate school of Medicine, Osaka University, 2-2, Yamadaoka, Suita, Osaka, 565-0871, Japan
Ahmed K. M. A. Ahmed
WPI Immunology Frontier Research Center, Osaka University, 3-1, Yamadaoka, Suita, Osaka, 565-0871, Japan
Ahmed K. M. A. Ahmed
Institute of Endemic Diseases, University of Khartoum, Khartoum, Sudan
Bidour K. Hussein, Mahmoud Koko & Muntaser E. Ibrahim
Department of Pathology, University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust, Coventry, UK
Mohamed Nimir
Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK
Mohamed Nimir
Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
Mohamed Nimir
Department of Cardiology, Royal Derby Hospital, Derby, UK
Khalil F. Ali
Department of Radiology, Universal Hospital, Khartoum, Sudan
Shaimaa Omer M. A. Taha
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Neelain University, Khartoum, Sudan
Mutaz Amin
Department of Basic Sciences, College of Medicine, Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University, Riyadh, P.O.Box 84428, Riyadh, 11671, Saudi Arabia
Liena E. O. Elsayed
Univ. Bordeaux, CNRS, INCIA, UMR 5287, F-33000, Bordeaux, France
Giovanni Stevanin
EPHE, PSL Research university, CNRS, INCIA, UMR 5287, F-75000, Paris, France
Giovanni Stevanin
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AY, AEA, LEOE, and GS designed the study. AY, AAAH, INM, MAH, MAS, SME, HES, AEMN, MAA, ME, FYO, AMB, SOMAT, EEB, MK, AEA, and LEOE evaluated the patients. AY, RA1; FA, RA2, SE, MAM, IZME, ZO, HM, MOEM, AAE, EOEM, AKMAA, EAAA, EE, BKH, ASIAA, LS, MN, OMTE, TEAE, AE, ESAA, MF, KFA, MA, and LEOE collected the samples and relevant data and performed the experiments. AY and GS interpreted the results. MEI, AEA, LEOE, and GS supervised the study. AY and GS drafted the manuscript. GS obtained funds for implementing the study procedures. All authors critically revised and approved the final version of the manuscript and agreed to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.
Correspondence to Ashraf Yahia or Giovanni Stevanin.
GS received a grant from BIOGEN (Cambridge, USA) unrelated to this work, and the other authors declare that they have no competing interests.
This study was approved by The Ethical Committee of Medical Campus, University of Khartoum, Sudan, and The Ethical Committee of the National University, Sudan (approval number NU-RECG200). All procedures in this study were performed per the 1975 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments. Informed written consent forms for participation were obtained from all participants or their guardians. DNA was anonymized and this report does not contain pedigree or full genealogical data to preserve this anonymization.
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Yahia, A., Hamed, A.A.A., Mohamed, I.N. et al. Clinical phenotyping and genetic diagnosis of a large cohort of Sudanese families with hereditary spinocerebellar degenerations. Eur J Hum Genet (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41431-023-01344-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41431-023-01344-6
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