Identification of the genetic cause of HMSN-P

Hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy with proximal dominance (HMSN-P) has been reported as a rare type of autosomal dominant adult-onset Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease. HMSN-P has been described only in Japanese descendants since 1997, and the causative gene has not been found. In this genetic and observational analysis study, the authors aimed to identify the genetic cause of HMSN-P in a Korean family and determine the pathogenic mechanism. The study was carried out in a translational research centre for rare neurologic disease and included 28 individuals (12 men and 16 women) from a Korean family with HMSN-P. The main outcome measures were whole-exome sequencing, linkage analysis, and magnetic resonance imaging. Through whole-exome sequencing, the authors revealed that HMSN-P is caused by a mutation in the TRK-fused gene (TFG). Clinical heterogeneities were revealed in HMSN-P between Korean and Japanese patients. The patients in the present report showed faster progression of the disease compared with the Japanese patients, and sensory nerve action potentials of the sural nerve were lost in the early stages of the disease. Moreover, tremor and hyperlipidemia were frequently found. Magnetic resonance imaging of the lower extremity revealed a distinct proximal dominant and sequential pattern of muscular involvement with a clearly different pattern than patients with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1A. Particularly, endoneural blood vessels revealed marked narrowing of the lumen with swollen vesicular endothelial cells. The authors conclude that the underlying cause of HMSN-P proves to be a mutation in TFG that lies on chromosome 3q13.2. This disease is not limited to Japanese descendants, and marked narrowing of endoneural blood vessels was noted in the present study. The authors suggest that TFG can affect the peripheral nerve tissue.