| Literature DB >> 20198483 |
Casper Jansen1, Willem Voet, Mark W Head, Piero Parchi, Helen Yull, Aad Verrips, Pieter Wesseling, Jan Meulstee, Frank Baas, Willem A van Gool, James W Ironside, Annemieke J M Rozemuller.
Abstract
Human prion diseases can be sporadic, inherited or acquired by infection and show considerable phenotypic heterogeneity. We describe the clinical, histopathological and pathological prion protein (PrP(Sc)) characteristics of a Dutch family with a novel 7-octapeptide repeat insertion (7-OPRI) in PRNP, the gene encoding the prion protein (PrP). Clinical features were available in four, neuropathological features in three and biochemical characteristics in two members of this family. The clinical phenotype was characterized by slowly progressive cognitive decline, personality change, lethargy, depression with anxiety and panic attacks, apraxia and a hypokinetic-rigid syndrome. Neuropathological findings consisted of numerous multi- and unicentric amyloid plaques throughout the cerebrum and cerebellum with varying degrees of spongiform degeneration. Genetic and molecular studies were performed in two male family members. One of them was homozygous for valine and the other heterozygous for methionine and valine at codon 129 of PRNP. Sequence analysis identified a novel 168 bp insertion [R2-R2-R2-R2-R3g-R2-R2] in the octapeptide repeat region of PRNP. Both patients carried the mutation on the allele with valine at codon 129. Western blot analysis showed type 1 PrP(Sc) in both patients and detected a smaller ~8 kDa PrP(Sc) fragment in the cerebellum in one patient. The features of this Dutch kindred define an unusual neuropathological phenotype and a novel PRNP haplotype among the previously documented 7-OPRI mutations, further expanding the spectrum of genotype-phenotype correlations in inherited prion diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20198483 PMCID: PMC3015204 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-010-0656-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088
Nucleotide sequences of codons 51–91 in normal, healthy individuals and irregular sequences in patients with insertional mutations in PRNP
| Normal (regular) sequences of codons 51–91 in | |||||||||
| Codon 51 | |||||||||
| CCT | CAG | GGC | GGT | GGT | GGC | TGG | GGG | CAG | R1 |
| pro | gln | gly | gly | gly | gly | trp | gly | gln | |
| CCT | CAT | GGT | GGT | GGC | TGG | GGG | CAG | R2 | |
| pro | his | gly | gly | gly | trp | gly | gln | ||
| CCT | CAT | GGT | GGT | GGC | TGG | GGG | CAG | R2 | |
| pro | his | gly | gly | gly | trp | gly | gln | ||
| CCC | CAT | GGT | GGT | GGC | TGG | GGA | CAG | R3 | |
| pro | his | gly | gly | gly | trp | gly | gln | ||
| CCT | CAT | GGT | GGT | GGC | TGG | GGT | CAA | R4 | |
| pro | his | gly | gly | gly | trp | gly | gln | ||
| Codon 91 | |||||||||
| Abnormal (irregular) sequence in affected individuals in this report | |||||||||
| CCC | CAT | GGT | GGT | GGC | TGG | GG | CAG | R3g | |
| pro | his | gly | gly | gly | trp | gly | gln | ||
Fig. 1Pedigree of the family described in this manuscript. Circles indicate females; squares correspond to males. Affected family members are shown in shaded symbols, unaffected individuals in open symbols. A diagonal bar in a symbol indicates a deceased family member. The question mark indicates a clinical history suggestive of prion disease, albeit not neuropathologically proven. The numbers refer to the case numbers in the text
Regional distribution of spongiosis, neuronal loss/gliosis and multicentric plaque density
| FC | PC | TC | OC | Hipp | STR | Th | BRST | CE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| III-4 | |||||||||
| Spongiosis | ++ | + | + | ++ | − | ++ | + | − | + |
| Gliosis/neuronal loss | ++ | + | ++ | ++ | + | ++ | + | − | − |
| Multicentric plaques | ++ | + | + | ++ | + | +++ | + | − | +++ |
| III-6 | |||||||||
| Spongiosis | +++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | + | ++ | ++ | −/+ | ++ |
| Gliosis/neuronal loss | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | + | ++ | ++ | −/+ | ++ |
| Multicentric plaques | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | − | ++ |
Each lesion was scored semi-quantitatively as not detectable (−), mild (+), moderate (++) and severe (+++). The number of PrP-positive multicentric plaques were counted per HPF and scored as not detectable (−), 1–4 plaques (+), 5–9 plaques (++) and 10–15 plaques (+++)
FC frontal cortex, PC parietal cortex, TC temporal cortex, OC occipital cortex, Hipp hippocampal formation, STR striatum, Th thalamus, BRST brainstem, CE cerebellum
Fig. 2Histopathological findings in two family members (III-4 and III-6) with 7-OPRI. Sections are stained with haematoxylin–eosin (a, b, e, f, g and h) and the 3F4 anti-PrP antibody (c, d, j and k), original magnification ×200. Mild (a) and severe (b) spongiform change in the frontal cortex; c, d multicentric and unicentric plaques in the frontal cortex; e mild spongiform change with multicentric plaques (arrows) in the caudate nucleus; f severe spongiform change in the caudate nucleus; g, j many multicentric plaques in the molecular layer of the cerebellum; h, k moderate spongiform change with multicentric plaques (arrow) in the molecular layer of the cerebellum
Fig. 3Western blot analysis of two family members (III-4 and III-6) with 7-OPRI. In a protease-resistant prion protein (PrPres) from specimens of temporal cortex (TC) and cerebellum (Cb) from one patient (III-4) and from specimens of temporal cortex (TC) and occipital cortex (OC) from the other patient (III-6) are shown flanked by reference standards of frontal cortex from sporadic CJD of the MM1 subtype (1) and frontal cortex from variant CJD (2B). In b the relative abundance of the three different glycoforms of PrPres is shown, calculated on the basis of densitometric analysis of three independent samples from the available frozen tissues shown in a. The relative abundance of the upper (diglycosylated) band is shown in black, the middle (monoglycosylated) band is shown in grey and the lower (non-glycosylated) band is shown in white. In c the PrPres profile from the cerebellum in patient III-4 (III-4 Cb) is compared with those found in a patient with Gerstmann–Sträussler–Scheinker disease carrying a proline to leucine substitution at position 102 (GSS P102L), and samples from the temporal cortex and occipital cortex of a Dutch case of protease sensitive prionopathy (PSPr TC and PSPr OC). M denotes molecular weight markers with their M indicated in kDa. The loading of individual samples on Western blots (volume of 10% weight/volume brain homogenate) was adjusted to allow easy comparison of the PrPres profiles obtained. All densitometric readings for glycoform analysis were within the linear range for each band in every sample
Clinical, genetic and neuropathological features of all known 14 patients carrying 7-OPRI
| Country | Mutation | Gender | Family history | Age at onset (years) | Duration (years) | Dementia | Ataxia | Myoclonus | Pyramidal | Extrapyramidal | Epileptic seizures | Psychiatric disturbances | Codon 129 | Immunoblot | Neuropathology | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | USA | R2c–R3–R2–R3–R2–R3–R2–R3g | F | Positive | 31 | 11 | Y | Y | Y | Abnormal behaviour | Met | Spongiosis, gliosis, neuronal loss | [ | ||||
| 2 | USA | F | 23 | 10 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Depression/mood change | Met | Mild neuronal loss and gliosis, no spongiosis | ||||||
| 3 | USA | F | 28 | 13 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Euphoria | Met | n.a. | ||||||
| 4 | Japan | R3–R2–R2–R2–R3g–R2–R2 | n.a. | Positive | n.a. | 7 | Y | n.a. | n.a. | [ | |||||||
| 5 | Belgium | n.a. | n.a. | Positive | 32 | 7 | Y | Ya | Met | n.a. | [ | ||||||
| 6 | Belgium | n.a. | 24 | 11 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Psychosis | Met | Spongiosis, gliosis, neuronal loss, elongated cerebellar plaques cerebellar cortex | ||||||
| 7 | Belgium | n.a. | 31 | 11 | Y | Y | Y | Depression/mood change | Met/Met | Spongiosis, gliosis, neuronal loss, elongated cerebellar plaques cerebellar cortex | |||||||
| 8 | Australia | R3–R2–R3–R2–R2–R2–R2 | n.a. | Positive | 29 | 16 | Y | Y | Y | Abnormal behaviour | Met/Val | Type 1 | Spongiosis, gliosis, neuronal loss, non-linear granular deposits cerebellar cortex | [ | |||
| 9 | China | R2–R2–R2–R3g–R2–R3g–R2a | F | Positive | 44 | 4 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Depression/mood change | Met/Met | Type 1 | Spongiosis, gliosis, neuronal loss | [ | ||
| 10 | Italy | R3–R2–R2–R3g–R2–R2–R2 | n.a. | Negative/de novo | 18 | 10 | Y | Y | Depression, psychosis, bipolar disorder | Met/Met | n.a. | [ | |||||
| 11 | Netherlands | n.a. | F | Positive | 50 | 0.7 | Y | Y | Emotional lability, anxiety attacks | n.a. | n.a. | This report | |||||
| 12 | Netherlands | n.a. | M | 49 | 3 | Y | Y | Emotional lability, apathetic | n.a. | Spongiosis +++, gliosis, neuronal loss, multicentric plaques (cerebellum ++, cortex +) | |||||||
| 13 | Netherlands | R2–R2–R2–R2–R3g–R2–R2 | M | 59 | 0.6 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Apathetic | Met/Val | Type 1 | Spongiosis +, gliosis, neuronal loss, multicentric plaques (cerebellum +++, cortex ++) | ||||
| 14 | Netherlands | R2–R2–R2–R2–R3g–R2–R2 | M | 51 | 5.4 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Depression, panick attacks | Val/Val | Type 1 and 8 kDa | Spongiosis +++, gliosis, neuronal loss, multicentric plaques (cerebellum ++, cortex +) |
aDescribed as motor problems
M male, F female, Met methionine, Val valine, Y present, n.a. not available/insufficient information, + mild, ++ moderate, +++ severe