A synonymousSLC2A1variant causes familial epilepsy and paroxysmal exercise-induced dyskinesia by creating aberrant mosaic splicing patterns

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Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Glucose transporter type-1 deficiency syndrome (GLUT1-DS) arises from variants in the SLC2A1 gene encoding the glucose transporter type-1 (GLUT1). Genetic analysis of a GLUT1-DS family identified a recurrent heterozygous synonymous SLC2A1 variant, adjacent to a 5’ donor splice site (NG_008232.1(NM_006516.4): c.972G>A, NP_006507.2: p.Ser324=). The splice site proximity and family segregation analysis warranted an investigation into SLC2A1 mRNA splicing. The same genotype has been published in two further GLUT1-DS multiplex families without functional biology validation. Methods The proband exhibited juvenile onset focal epilepsy and paroxysmal exercise induced dyskinesia and family members underwent multiplex segregation analysis for c.972G>A. Family members exhibited phenotypes including focal epilepsy, intellectual disability, early-onset absence epilepsy and paroxysmal exercise-induced dyskinesia. In silico and in vitro minigene analysis assessed the effect of c.972G>A on SLC2A1 mRNA splicing. Results Segregation analysis revealed the synonymous variant associates with more severe epilepsy and GLUT1-DS phenotypes in the family. In silico analysis predicted a disruption of the 5’ donor splice site of intron 7. In vitro minigene assays demonstrated the activation of two cryptic donor splice sites, generating three transcripts: WT, and two aberrantly spliced isoforms causing 4bp and 32bp deletions. This was previously undetectable by whole blood RNA analysis. Conclusions Our report demonstrates the synonymous c.972G>A, p.Ser324= variant causes a leaky mosaic SLC2A1 splicing aberrancy, affecting ∼40% of transcripts, with ∼60% remaining WT spliced. These GLUT1 frameshift deletions result in a variable GLUT1 haploinsufficiency and phenotypic heterogeneity in 3 GLUT1-DS families and highlights the clinical importance of synonymous variants.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00