唐氏综合征患者6个月搏动性促性腺激素释放激素治疗过程中神经元丢失和髓鞘形成的持续差异模式

IF 4.1 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Brain communications Pub Date : 2025-03-22 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/braincomms/fcaf117
Michela Adamo, Mihaly Gayer, An Jacobs, Quentin Raynaud, Raphael Sebbah, Giulia di Domenicantonio, Adeliya Latypova, Nathalie Vionnet, Ferath Kherif, Antoine Lutti, Nelly Pitteloud, Bogdan Draganski
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管在理解三倍21号染色体对唐氏综合症患者大脑和行为的影响方面取得了重大进展,但我们对人类潜在神经生物学的了解仍然有限。我们试图解决一些有关唐氏综合症中大脑结构差异的驱动因素及其与认知功能的关联的相关问题。为此,在一项先导性磁共振成像(MRI)研究中,我们监测了唐氏综合征患者接受脉动性促性腺激素释放激素(GnRH)治疗超过6个月的大脑解剖,并与年龄和性别匹配的健康对照组进行了比较。我们分析了横断面(唐氏综合征/健康对照n = 11/27;唐氏综合征-女性2例/男性9例,年龄26.7±5.0岁;健康对照组-8名女性/19名男性,年龄24.1±2.5岁)和纵向(唐氏综合征/健康对照组n = 8/13;唐氏综合征女性1例/男性7例,年龄26.4±5.3岁;健康对照组(女性4名/男性9名,年龄24.7±2.2岁)弛松测量和弥散加权MRI数据以及标准认知评估。统计检验寻找唐氏综合症患者和健康对照组之间的横断面基线差异和随时间的差异变化。事后分析仅限于唐氏综合症组,测试了个体整体认知表现和相关大脑解剖变化之间潜在的时间依赖性相互作用。脑MRI统计分析涵盖了整个大脑的灰质和白质区域,允许研究区域体积,大分子/髓鞘和铁含量,以及主要白质束的扩散张量和神经突方向和弥散密度特征。横断面分析显示,唐氏综合征患者的额叶、颞叶和小脑体积减少,在调整小头畸形后,只有小脑的体积差异仍然显著(P家庭校正< 0.05)。体积减少与皮层和皮层下大分子/髓磷脂含量减少平行,仅限于皮质运动系统、丘脑和基底节区(P家族校正< 0.05)。所有主要白质束均显示普遍存在的平均扩散率和细胞内体积分数降低,而磁化转移饱和度指标无差异(P家族校正< 0.05)。与同期的健康对照相比,接受GnRH治疗的唐氏综合征患者表现出认知改善(蒙特利尔认知评估从11.4±5.5降至15.1±5.6;P < 0.01),以观察到的不同神经解剖模式的稳定性为背景。尽管缺乏足够的唐氏综合征对照组,但我们将在年轻人中获得的横断面和纵向研究结果解释为主要的神经发育性神经元丢失的证据,这是由于神经发生功能障碍造成的,没有短期髓磷脂丢失的迹象。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Enduring differential patterns of neuronal loss and myelination along 6-month pulsatile gonadotropin-releasing hormone therapy in individuals with Down syndrome.

Despite major progress in understanding the impact of the triplicated chromosome 21 on the brain and behaviour in Down syndrome, our knowledge of the underlying neurobiology in humans is still limited. We sought to address some of the pertinent questions about the drivers of brain structure differences and their associations with cognitive function in Down syndrome. To this aim, in a pilot magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study, we monitored brain anatomy in individuals with Down syndrome receiving pulsatile gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) therapy over 6 months in comparison with typically developed age- and sex-matched healthy controls. We analysed cross-sectional (Down syndrome/healthy controls n  = 11/27; Down syndrome-2 females/9 males, age 26.7 ± 5.0 years old; healthy controls-8 females/19 males, age 24.1 ± 2.5 years old) and longitudinal (Down syndrome/healthy controls n  = 8/13; Down syndrome-1 female/7 males, age 26.4 ± 5.3 years old; healthy controls-4 females/9 males, 24.7 ± 2.2 years old) relaxometry and diffusion-weighted MRI data alongside standard cognitive assessment. The statistical tests looked for cross-sectional baseline differences and for differential changes over time between Down syndrome and healthy controls. The post hoc analysis confined to the Down syndrome group, tested for potential time-dependent interactions between individuals' overall cognitive performance and associated brain anatomy changes. The brain MRI statistical analyses covered both grey and white matter regions across the whole brain allowing for investigation of regional volume, macromolecular/myelin and iron content, additionally to diffusion tensor and neurite orientation and dispersion density characterization across major white matter tracts. The cross-sectional analysis showed reduced frontal, temporal and cerebellar volumes in Down syndrome with only the cerebellar differences remaining significant after adjustment for the presence of microcephaly (P family-wise-corrected < 0.05). The volume reductions were paralleled by decreased cortical and subcortical macromolecular/myelin content confined to the cortical motor system, thalamus and basal ganglia (P family-wise-corrected < 0.05). All major white matter tracts showed a ubiquitous mean diffusivity and intracellular volume fraction reduction contrasted with no differences in magnetization transfer saturation metrics (P family-wise-corrected < 0.05). Compared with healthy controls over the same period, Down syndrome individuals under GnRH therapy showed cognitive improvement (Montreal Cognitive Assessment from 11.4 ± 5.5 to 15.1 ± 5.6; P < 0.01) on the background of stability of the observed differential neuroanatomical patterns. Despite the lack of adequate Down syndrome control group, we interpret the obtained cross-sectional and longitudinal findings in young adults as evidence for predominant neurodevelopmental neuronal loss due to dysfunctional neurogenesis without signs for short-term myelin loss.

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