儿童sod1相关神经系统疾病的免疫失调

IF 1.7 4区 生物学 Q3 GENETICS & HEREDITY
Rozlyn Claire Thomas Boutin, Farzaneh Shobeirian, Shelin Adam, Anna Lehman, Ramona Salvarinova, Jan M Friedman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

痉挛性四肢瘫痪和轴性张力低下(STAHP)与双等位基因SOD1缺乏相关,是最近发现的一种影响儿童的神经系统疾病。迄今为止,五项研究共描述了9例病例,所有病例的特征都是在2岁之前开始出现进行性痉挛性四肢瘫痪。除两例外,所有这些病例都与同一遗传变异的纯合性有关(NM_000454.4:c.335dupG;NP_000445.1:p.Cys112Trpfs*11),导致无功能酶产物。最近,在SOD1缺乏SOD1活性的类似患者中,已经描述了SOD1中纯合的3碱基对框内缺失(NM_000454.5: c.357_357+2delGGT)和截断移码变体(NM_000454.5: c.52_56del5ins154)。在这里,我们扩展了STAHP患者的神经和神经外表型,该患者具有一种新的纯合子SOD1变异,预计会导致编码酶的钙和锌结合活性被破坏。我们描述了一名19岁的男性,他出生于近亲父母,是NM_000454.4:c的纯合子。369_371del SOD1变体。患者在1岁前出现进行性神经肌肉变性,符合STAHP的诊断。7岁时的脑部MRI显示小脑萎缩,如先前所述,以及视神经小和视交叉发育不良,这在以前没有报道过。该患者还表现出免疫失调的临床特征,并伴有难治性炎症性肠病、哮喘、复发性感染和皮炎。总的来说,我们患者的早发性进行性神经系统疾病与SOD1变异的纯合性有关,预计会导致转录蛋白的功能受损,这与STAHP的诊断一致。我们的患者还表现出视神经萎缩和免疫稳态紊乱,这在以前没有被描述为这种情况的一部分。结合先前对携带SOD1功能丧失变体的儿童的病例研究,该病例强调了抗氧化治疗在减缓缺乏SOD1活性的患者疾病进展中的可能作用。这些病例也提请注意,需要仔细考虑提出的SOD1敲除治疗ALS的可能有害的神经元和神经元外并发症。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Immune Dysregulation in a Child With SOD1-Related Neurological Disease.

Spastic tetraplegia and axial hypotonia (STAHP) associated with biallelic SOD1 deficiency is a recently described neurological disorder affecting children. Five studies have described a total of nine cases thus far, all characterized by the onset of progressive spastic tetraplegia beginning before 2 years of age. All but two of these cases are associated with homozygosity for the same genetic variant (NM_000454.4:c.335dupG; NP_000445.1:p.Cys112Trpfs*11) that leads to a non-functional enzyme product. More recently, a homozygous 3-base pair in-frame deletion (NM_000454.5: c.357_357+2delGGT) and a truncating frameshift variant (NM_000454.5: c.52_56del5ins154) in SOD1 have been described in similarly affected patients lacking SOD1 activity. Here we expand on the neurological and extra-neuronal phenotypes of STAHP in a patient with a novel homozygous SOD1 variant predicted to result in disrupted calcium- and zinc-binding activity of the encoded enzyme. We describe a 19-year-old male born to consanguineous parents who is homozygous for an NM_000454.4:c.369_371del SOD1 variant. The patient had progressive neuromuscular degeneration with onset before 1 year of age, consistent with a diagnosis of STAHP. Brain MRI at 7 years of age showed cerebellar atrophy, as has previously been described in this condition, as well as small optic nerves and a hypoplastic optic chiasm, which have not been reported previously. Our patient also exhibited clinical features of immune dysregulation with treatment-refractory inflammatory bowel disease, asthma, recurrent infections, and dermatitis. Overall, the early-onset progressive neurological disorder in our patient, found in association with homozygosity for an SOD1 variant that is predicted to result in impaired function of the transcribed protein, is consistent with a diagnosis of STAHP. Our patient also demonstrates optic atrophy and disrupted immune homeostasis, which have not been previously described as part of this condition. Taken together with previous case studies in children carrying loss-of-function variants of SOD1, this case highlights a possible role for antioxidant therapy in slowing disease progression in patients lacking SOD1 activity. These cases also draw attention to the need for careful consideration of possible harmful neuronal and extra-neuronal complications of proposed SOD1 knockdown therapies against ALS.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
5.00%
发文量
432
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Medical Genetics - Part A (AJMG) gives you continuous coverage of all biological and medical aspects of genetic disorders and birth defects, as well as in-depth documentation of phenotype analysis within the current context of genotype/phenotype correlations. In addition to Part A , AJMG also publishes two other parts: Part B: Neuropsychiatric Genetics , covering experimental and clinical investigations of the genetic mechanisms underlying neurologic and psychiatric disorders. Part C: Seminars in Medical Genetics , guest-edited collections of thematic reviews of topical interest to the readership of AJMG .
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