| Literature DB >> 20953793 |
Jeffrey M Gelfand1, Jacque L Duncan, Caroline A Racine, Leslie A Gillum, Cynthia T Chin, Yuhua Zhang, Qing Zhang, Lee-Jun C Wong, Austin Roorda, Ari J Green.
Abstract
Point mutations at m.8993T>C and m.8993T>G of the mtDNA ATPase 6 gene cause the neurogenic weakness, ataxia and retinitis pigmentosa (NARP) syndrome, a mitochondrial disorder characterized by retinal, central and peripheral neurodegeneration. We performed detailed neurological, neuropsychological and ophthalmological phenotyping of a mother and four daughters with NARP syndrome from the mtDNA m.8993T>C ATPase 6 mutation, including 3-T brain MRI, spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT), adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (AOSLO), electromyography and nerve conduction studies (EMG-NCS) and formal neuropsychological testing. The degree of mutant heteroplasmy for the m.8993T>C mutation was evaluated by real-time allele refractory mutation system quantitative PCR of mtDNA from hair bulbs (ectoderm) and blood leukocytes (mesoderm). There were marked phenotypic differences between family members, even between individuals with the greatest degrees of ectodermal and mesodermal heteroplasmy. 3-T MRI revealed cerebellar atrophy and cystic and cavitary T2 hyperintensities in the basal ganglia. SD-OCT demonstrated similarly heterogeneous areas of neuronal and axonal loss in inner and outer retinal layers. AOSLO showed increased cone spacing due to photoreceptor loss. EMG-NCS revealed varying degrees of length-dependent sensorimotor axonal polyneuropathy. On formal neuropsychological testing, there were varying deficits in processing speed, visual-spatial functioning and verbal fluency and high rates of severe depression. Many of these cognitive deficits likely localize to cerebellar and/or basal ganglia dysfunction. High-resolution retinal and brain imaging in NARP syndrome revealed analogous patterns of tissue injury characterized by heterogeneous areas of neuronal loss.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20953793 PMCID: PMC3068520 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-010-5775-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Phenotypic characterization of a family with NARP syndrome from the m.8993T>C ATPase 6 mutation
| Mother (Ml) | Daughter 1 (Dl) | Daughter 2 (D2) | Daughter 3 (D3) | Daughter 4 (D4) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 48 | 28 | 26 | 22 | 16 |
| Hair-bulb heteroplasmy (%) | 87 | 99 | 54 | 99 | 99 |
| Leukocyte heteroplasmy (%) | 78 | 78 | 42 | 95 | 92 |
| Clinical symptoms | RP, mild numbness, weakness, depression | Severe RP, moderate ataxia, neuropathy, weakness, depression | Remote history of depression with suicidal ideation | Severe ataxia, moderate RP, remote depression | Severe RP, episodic mild ataxia, mild depression |
| Neurological examination | Mild asymmetric weakness, absent triceps and S1 reflexes, decreased pain and vibration sense in the feet | Lingual dysarthria, moderate proximal weakness, mildly decreased vibration sense in the feet, moderate dysmetria, impaired tandem (straight line) gait | Normal | Nystagmus, saccadic breakdown, dysarthria, moderate weakness, spasticity, absent S1 reflex, dysmetria, tremor, impaired tandem (straight line) gait, decreased pain and vibration sense in the feet | Overshot saccades, mild proximal weakness, moderate dysmetria and dysdiadochokinesia, decreased S1 reflexes, decreased pain and vibration sense in the feet |
| EMG-NCS | Sensorimotor axonal polyneuropathy | Not done | Not done | Sensorimotor axonal polyneuropathy | Sensorimotor axonal polyneuropathy |
| MRI | Cystic/cavitary T2 hyperintensities in the bilateral putamina and globus pallidi, mild cerebellar atrophy, mild global volume loss | Cystic/cavitary T2 hyperintensities in bilateral putamina, anterior commissure, frontal gyrus recti, cerebellar atrophy | Mild T2 cystic/cavitary changes in basal ganglia | (Performed at age 18 years) Diffuse atrophy of cortex, cerebellum and cervical cord, T2 cystic/cavitary basal ganglia hyperintensities | Cystic/cavitary T2 hyperintensities in the anterior putamina and caudate heads, mild cerebellar atrophy |
| Neuropsychological testing | MMSE 29/30; selective impairments in information processing speed, set-shifting, and visual-spatial skills | MMSE 27/27 (excluding visual tasks); selective mild deficits in verbal fluency | MMSE 29/30; grossly normal with the exception of slightly variable information processing speed | MMSE 27/30; relative sparing of verbal abilities with impairments in motor speed, information processing speed, visual-spatial skills and memory | MMSE 30/30; selective impairments in motor speed, information processing speed, verbal fluency, and visual recall (despite adequate copy performance) |
| Mood | Moderate depression with suicidal ideation | Severe depression with moderate anxiety, despite antidepressant therapy; remote history of suicide attempt | Remote history of depression with suicidal ideation | Remote history of depression | Mild depression with severe anxiety |
| Best-corrected visual acuity | 20/50 | 5/125 | 20/16 | 20/25 | 20/50 |
| High-resolution optical coherence tomography | Moderate–severe photoreceptor layer thinning, with mild involvement of retinal nerve fiber layer | Severe foveal thinning, including photoreceptor layer, retinal pigment epithelial layer and retinal nerve fiber layer/ganglion cell layer | Not done | Patchy ring of photoreceptor/retinal nerve fiber layer thinning | Progressive thinning of the temporal photoreceptor/retinal nerve fiber layer |
RP retinitis pigmentosa, MMSE mini-mental state examination
Fig. 1High-resolution retinal and brain imaging in NARP syndrome demonstrates analogous patterns of tissue injury. This 28-year-old woman (D1) with NARP syndrome from the mtDNA ATPase 6 m.8993T>C mutation with 78% blood leukocyte and 99% hair-bulb heteroplasmy had severe RP and moderate ataxia. a, b 3-T MRI demonstrates cystic and cavitary T2 hyperintensities in the bilateral putamina (a), likely reflecting neuronal necrosis, and also moderate cerebellar atrophy with T1 imaging (b). c High-resolution OCT image of the macula demonstrates severe retinal thinning, primarily due to degeneration of the photoreceptor and the retinal pigment epithelial cell layers, but also associated thinning of the ganglion cell (GCL) and retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL). d Macular OCT image from an age-similar normal female shown for comparison
Fig. 2Visual-spatial deficits in NARP syndrome reflect impaired cognitive functioning, not just poor vision. Subject D4, despite moderate RP causing impaired vision, had normal visual-spatial constructional skills using the Rey-Osterrieth complex figure, but exhibited deficits in visual-spatial recall. On the other hand, M1 and D3, who both also suffered from moderate to severe RP, had difficulty with both visual copy and visual recall (D1 could not perform either of the tasks due to severe visual loss). D2, who was clinically unaffected, performed normally on both tasks
Fig. 3Patterns of retinal injury in NARP syndrome. Infrared fundus image (a) and OCT of the macula (a, b) in a 22-year-old woman with NARP syndrome (D3) demonstrate moderate thinning of the photoreceptor layer, as well as associated thinning of the retinal pigment epithelial, retinal nerve fiber and ganglion cell layers. c Macular OCT image of an age-similar normal female shown for comparison. d AOSLO image of the fovea (black dot) reveals a contiguous pattern of decreased cone density in the sampled area due to photoreceptor loss (which makes it easier to resolve the individual photoreceptors in the image). e In contrast, AOSLO image of the fovea in her sister (D2), who had normal vision, shows a normal pattern of high-density, closely packed cones (black scale bars angular distance 0.5°, approximately 150 µm)