Defining the language phenotype of the FMR1 premutation

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R21 · $244,237 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

ABSTRACT Parent Study. This application is being submitted to PA-18-591 in accordance with NOT-AG-20-008. The proposed project builds on the parent study (R21DC017804; 2019-2022) to add new questions regarding aging. The overarching goal of the parent study is to define the language phenotype associated with the FMR1 premutation genotype. The parent study specific aims are to identify aspects of language that distinguish premutation carriers from controls; investigate the interplay between language and executive aspects of the FMR1 premutation phenotype; and explore associations with FMR1 gene dysfunction. Overview. Over 1 million individuals in the US (1:151 females, 1:468 males) carry a premutation allele on the FMR1 gene. Despite the high prevalence of the FMR1 premutation genotype, its clinical phenotype is poorly defined. Until recently, it was mistakenly believed that carriers of the FMR1 premutation were “silent carriers” who suffered no clinical effects besides the risk of passing the mutated gene to their offspring, which could cause fragile X syndrome. However, it is now clear that premutation carriers experience a range of language, cognitive, and psychiatric symptoms. Additionally, about 10% of female carriers will develop FXTAS, a late- onset neurodegenerative disorder that is characterized, in part, by dementia, executive deficits, and cognitive decline. These clinical manifestations of the premutation are associated with reduced quality of life—both for the premutation carrier mother as well as for her children with fragile X. New, emerging evidence suggests premutation carrier mothers may experience premature age-related decline, where subtle cognitive deficits are evident in the third decade of life and appear to worsen across middle age. This is significant because it suggests that premutation carrier mothers may experience symptom aggravation at a time when caregiving burden is at its peak. Yet, there remain large gaps in our understanding of the aging cognitive phenotype. First, our current understanding is limited to a few reports that were narrowly focused on specific executive skills without broader characterization of other cognitive domains, such as language. Additionally, most prior studies have focused on mothers younger than the age of 55, which has resulted in poor understanding of symptom expression in late midlife and early old age. These knowledge gaps represent substantial barriers to effective clinical management, as we lack the data needed to understand the long-term effects of the FMR1 premutation genotype. Supplement Aims. In other forms of pathological aging, such as in dementia, subtle cognitive-linguistic deficits are observed early in disease progression, sometimes before impairments in other cognitive skills can be detected. In this Supplement we will extend this work to the study of premutation carrier mothers through the characterization of aging cognitive-linguistic deficits. This approach may provide ...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10123648
Project number
3R21DC017804-02S1
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA AT COLUMBIA
Principal Investigator
Jessica Klusek
Activity code
R21
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$244,237
Award type
3
Project period
2019-04-01 → 2022-03-31