Otago Daily Times

PhD candidate’s research helps find cause of disorder

- JOHN LEWIS john.lewis@odt.co.nz

WHAT started out as a study of a child with seizures and delayed developmen­t, has grown into a global study which has allowed researcher­s to find the cause of the unusual and incredibly rare genetic condition.

The discovery is now giving hope to families with the condition and others with related disorders.

Lead author and University of Otago Dunedin School of Medicine PhD candidate Amy Jones has been working on the research with academics from across the United States, South Africa, the United Kingdom and Europe to study the role of glutamine in brain developmen­t.

By analysing the effects genetic variants had on brain cells, they found the cause of a new rare condition — Glutamine Synthetase Stabilisat­ion Disorder — which causes seizures and delayed developmen­t.

‘‘Eight other individual­s from around the world with disrupted brain developmen­t and severe epilepsy, had their DNA sequenced and causative genetic variants were found,’’ she said.

‘‘These variants were all positioned at the start of the same gene, prompting us to ask why.’’

Molecular experiment­s revealed the genetic variants had the effect of producing a stabilised enzyme that produced the small molecule glutamine in an unregulate­d fashion.

‘‘Typically, genetic disorders result from genetic variants that disable a gene, so it was surprising that in this case, there was an increase in stability of the enzyme.

‘‘In some ways, these variants can be thought to be taking the handbrake off the enzyme and letting it freewheel in an unregulate­d fashion.’’

The children in the study were previously treated according to their symptoms, rather than from an understand­ing of the cause of their condition.

There are thousands of similar rare disorders, affecting 8% of the population, and defining their causes was the first step to creating specific treatments to enable more effective management of them.

She said the discovery told researcher­s that the production of glutamine needed to be maintained within a very tight specific range during brain developmen­t.

‘‘Too much and too little damages the developing brain,’’ she said.

Senior author and University of Otago Curekids paediatric genetics Professor Stephen Roberston described the study as ‘‘an excellent example of finely tuned precision medicine’’.

‘‘Defining their causes is the first logical step to formulatin­g treatments specific to them, to enable more effective management of the disorders.’’

Ms Jones said it was important new disorders were discovered and understood.

‘‘This work on a rare disorder also contribute­s to the collective knowledge of critical components of healthy brain developmen­t.’’

She hoped the findings would enable other individual­s who fit the clinical profile, but who had not had a diagnosis yet, to be tested for this disorder.

‘‘It is very likely there are individual­s with this disorder that aren’t yet diagnosed.’’

 ?? PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN ?? Finely tuned medicine . . . University of Otago Dunedin School of Medicine PhD candidate Amy Jones has helped to discover the cause of a rare genetic condition in children.
PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN Finely tuned medicine . . . University of Otago Dunedin School of Medicine PhD candidate Amy Jones has helped to discover the cause of a rare genetic condition in children.

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