Progressive Myoclonic Epilepsy
Gene: CTSF
Pathogenic variants in the CTSF gene are associated with an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder known as neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis-13 (CLN13), as well as Kufs type B disease. The disease is characterized by adult onset (11–65 years, with a mean of 34 years), progressive cognitive decline, motor dysfunction, dementia, and often early death. Despite claims in some disease databases that myoclonic epilepsy is commonly observed in Kufs type B disease, no published articles were found to support this association.
- Most pathogenic mutations, including nonsense mutations, frameshift insertions/deletions, and splice-site variants, lead to truncated or non-functional CTSF protein.Created: 20 Nov 2025, 12:17 a.m. | Last Modified: 20 Nov 2025, 12:17 a.m.
Panel Version: 0.22
Mode of inheritance
BIALLELIC, autosomal or pseudoautosomal
Phenotypes
: Progressive cognitive decline; dementia; motor abnormalities; tremor; ataxia; dysarthria; cerebellar signs; extrapyramidal signs; myoclonus; perioral dyskinesias; hyperreflexia; extensor plantar responses; primitive reflexes; seizures; diffuse cerebral atrophy; cerebellar atrophy; accumulation of autofluorescent material in neurons; behavioral changes; emotional lability; depression; skin fibroblasts showing osmiophilic cytoplasmic inclusions.
Publications
Mode of pathogenicity
Loss-of-function variants (as defined in pop up message) DO NOT cause this phenotype - please provide details in the comments
gene: CTSF was added gene: CTSF was added to Progressive Myoclonic Epilepsy_RMH. Sources: Expert Review Green,Royal Melbourne Hospital Mode of inheritance for gene: CTSF was set to BIALLELIC, autosomal or pseudoautosomal Phenotypes for gene: CTSF were set to Ceroid lipofuscinosis, neuronal, 13, Kufs type, 615362