Clinical and molecular characterization of SLC31A1-related developmental and epileptic encephalopathy: insights from 13 new cases
Author
Date
2025-09-23Permanent link
http://hdl.handle.net/11351/13822DOI
10.1093/braincomms/fcaf348
ISSN
2632-1297
PMID
41040850
Abstract
Copper is indispensable for various metabolic processes, notably mitochondrial respiration. In humans, copper homeostasis hinges on transporters such as copper transporter 1 (CTR1), encoded by the SLC31A1 gene. Recently, bi-allelic mutations in SLC31A1 have been associated with a new neurodevelopmental disorder. This study presents clinical, genetic, and biochemical findings from 13 new cases across 10 families worldwide. RNA sequencing evaluated gene expression, and Western blotting assessed copper transporter 1 protein levels. Additionally, mitochondrial respiratory capacity was measured via high-resolution respirometry. Affected individuals exhibited a distinct clinical phenotype characterized by early-onset epileptic encephalopathy, severe neurodevelopmental delay and hypotonia, with high mortality. Neuroimaging revealed significant brain atrophy and white matter abnormalities. Genetic analysis identified bi-allelic SLC31A1 variants, predominantly p.His120Gln in six cases and p.(Arg102Cys/His) in three cases. Functional studies in patient fibroblasts demonstrated impaired mitochondrial respiration. This study significantly broadens the clinical spectrum of this recently described syndrome, presenting as a severe developmental encephalopathy with high mortality risk, and suggests mitochondrial dysfunction as a potential pathomechanism. These findings contribute to the mounting evidence linking copper transporter 1 dysfunction to neurodegeneration, underscoring the urgency for further therapeutic investigations.
Keywords
Epileptic encephalopathy; Brain MRI; Functional validationBibliographic citation
Juliá-Palacios N, Muñoz-Pujol G, Maroofian R, Bertoli-Avella AM, Gómez-Chiari M, Muchart-López J, et al. Clinical and molecular characterization of SLC31A1-related developmental and epileptic encephalopathy: insights from 13 new cases. Brain Commun. 2025 Sep 23;7(5):fcaf348.
Audience
Professionals
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