Gene Disease Score gda Association Type Original DB Sentence supporting the association PMID PMID Year
Entrez Id: 112476
Gene Symbol: PRRT2
PRRT2
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE The identification of heterozygous mutations in the PRRT2 gene in paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia as well as in benign familial infantile seizures linked episodic movement disorders with epilepsy. 23963607

2013

Entrez Id: 112476
Gene Symbol: PRRT2
PRRT2
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE PRRT2 gene mutations have recently been identified as a causative gene of Paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia (PKD), a rare movement disorder characterised by the occurrence of chorea, dystonia or athetosis triggered by sudden action. 23182655

2013

Entrez Id: 112476
Gene Symbol: PRRT2
PRRT2
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE These findings show that mutations in PRRT2 cause both epilepsy and a movement disorder. 22243967

2012

Entrez Id: 2775
Gene Symbol: GNAO1
GNAO1
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE Recurrent GNAO1 Mutations Associated With Developmental Delay and a Movement Disorder. 27625011

2016

Entrez Id: 2775
Gene Symbol: GNAO1
GNAO1
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 Biomarker BEFREE GNAO1-related MD consisted of a severe early-onset hyperkinetic syndrome, with prominent chorea, dystonia and orofacial dyskinesia. 30642806

2019

Entrez Id: 112476
Gene Symbol: PRRT2
PRRT2
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE Four patients had a deletion of a known movement disorder gene including paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia (PRRT2; n=2), SGCE (myoclonus dystonia, n=1), and TITF1 (benign hereditary chorea, n=1). 22515636

2012

Entrez Id: 2775
Gene Symbol: GNAO1
GNAO1
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE Here we develop a mouse model carrying a human GNAO1 mutation (G203R) and determine whether the clinical features of patients with this GNAO1 mutation, which includes both epilepsy and movement disorder, would be evident in the mouse model. 30682176

2019

Entrez Id: 2775
Gene Symbol: GNAO1
GNAO1
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE A case of severe movement disorder with GNAO1 mutation responsive to topiramate. 27916449

2017

Entrez Id: 112476
Gene Symbol: PRRT2
PRRT2
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 Biomarker BEFREE The main genes involved in primary paroxysmal movement disorders include PRRT2, PNKD, SLC2A1, ATP1A3, GCH1, PARK2, ADCY5, CACNA1A and KCNA1. 27567459

2017

Entrez Id: 2775
Gene Symbol: GNAO1
GNAO1
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE GNAO1-associated epileptic encephalopathy and movement disorders: c.607G>A variant represents a probable mutation hotspot with a distinct phenotype. 28202424

2017

Entrez Id: 112476
Gene Symbol: PRRT2
PRRT2
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE <b>Expert opinion</b>: After secondary paroxysmal dyskinesias, the most common paroxysmal movement disorders are likely to be PRRT2-associated paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesias, which respond well to small doses of carbamazepine, and episodic ataxia type 2, which often responds to acetazolamide. 31353980

2019

Entrez Id: 112476
Gene Symbol: PRRT2
PRRT2
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 Biomarker BEFREE We hypothesize a pathogenic role of PRRT2 mutation in inducing benign myoclonus of early infancy, similarly to that at the origin of other PRRT2-related paroxysmal movement disorders, such as paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia. 26876767

2016

Entrez Id: 112476
Gene Symbol: PRRT2
PRRT2
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE As a rare type of movement disorder, paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia mainly affects children and is associated with PRRT2 gene mutation. 28525812

2017

Entrez Id: 2775
Gene Symbol: GNAO1
GNAO1
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 Biomarker BEFREE GNAO1 has been recently identified to be involved in the pathogenesis of early infantile epileptic encephalopathy and movement disorders. 30103967

2018

Entrez Id: 2775
Gene Symbol: GNAO1
GNAO1
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE The authors report 2 cases of brothers with a severe movement disorder and hypotonia without epilepsy who have been confirmed by whole exome sequencing to have a novel mutation in GNAO1. 26060304

2016

Entrez Id: 2775
Gene Symbol: GNAO1
GNAO1
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE Patients with GNAO1 mutations can present with a severe, progressive movement disorder in the absence of epilepsy. 27068059

2016

Entrez Id: 2775
Gene Symbol: GNAO1
GNAO1
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE Concurrent movement disorders are also a prominent feature in the spectrum of GNAO1 encephalopathy. 30682224

2019

Entrez Id: 2775
Gene Symbol: GNAO1
GNAO1
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 GeneticVariation BEFREE Here we review a mechanistic model in which loss-of-function (LOF) GNAO1 alleles cause epilepsy and gain-of-function (GOF) alleles are primarily associated with movement disorders. 29758257

2018

Entrez Id: 112476
Gene Symbol: PRRT2
PRRT2
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 Biomarker BEFREE The subsequent reduction of PRRT2 protein may lead to altered synaptic neurotransmitter release and dysregulated neuronal excitability in various regions of the brain, resulting in paroxysmal movement disorders and seizure phenotypes. 26598493

2015

Entrez Id: 112476
Gene Symbol: PRRT2
PRRT2
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.500 Biomarker BEFREE A focal motor seizure phenomenologically manifested as a defined movement disorder in 29% of the patients from a consecutive video-EEG documented cohort as per consensus among experts: myoclonus and dystonia (10 and 9 cases, respectively) were the most common movement disorders, followed by chorea (4), stereotypies (3) myoclonus-dystonia (2), and tremor (1). 30361137

2019

Entrez Id: 3064
Gene Symbol: HTT
HTT
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.440 GeneticVariation BEFREE The disease results from an expanded sequence of CAG repeats in the huntingtin gene and leads to a movement disorder with associated cognitive and systemic deficits. 17353947

2007

Entrez Id: 3064
Gene Symbol: HTT
HTT
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.440 GeneticVariation BEFREE We report the case of a 29 year old woman with a complex movement disorder syndrome due to the combination of coexisting pathological triplet repeat expansions of huntingtin and ATXN8 genes. 20403608

2010

Entrez Id: 3064
Gene Symbol: HTT
HTT
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.440 Biomarker BEFREE Huntington disease (HD) is caused by an expanded HTT CAG repeat that leads in a length-dependent, completely dominant manner to onset of a characteristic movement disorder. 26849111

2016

Entrez Id: 3064
Gene Symbol: HTT
HTT
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.440 GeneticVariation BEFREE In order to examine the effects of CAG block lengths, we have correlated ApoE genotypes with the age of onset in 145 patients symptomatic for HD with psychiatric and somatic symptoms (depression, psychosis, dementia, choreic, and other movement disorders) harbouring only modestly expanded huntingtin alleles (41-45 CAGs). 15548484

2004

Entrez Id: 6323
Gene Symbol: SCN1A
SCN1A
CUI: C0026650
Disease: Movement Disorders
Movement Disorders
0.410 GeneticVariation BEFREE This case demonstrates that SCN1A mutations may cause movement disorders as an atypical phenotype and the case history of this patient may expand our understanding of the clinical spectrum of SCN1A-associated epileptic encephalopathy.[Published with video sequences]. 24776920

2014