| Literature DB >> 21303513 |
Claudia M Greco1, Celestine S Navarro, Michael R Hunsaker, Izumi Maezawa, John F Shuler, Flora Tassone, Mary Delany, Jacky W Au, Robert F Berman, Lee-Way Jin, Cynthia Schumann, Paul J Hagerman, Randi J Hagerman.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is the most common inherited form of intellectual disability, and is the most common single-gene disorder known to be associated with autism. Despite recent advances in functional neuroimaging and our understanding of the molecular pathogenesis, only limited neuropathologic information on FXS is available.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21303513 PMCID: PMC3045897 DOI: 10.1186/2040-2392-2-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Autism Impact factor: 7.509
Documented neuropathology in previously published studies
| Author | Patient | Tissues | Brain region analyzed | Method of analysis | Microscopical neuropathology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dunn | 18-year-old man, later diagnosed with fragile X syndrome | Brain: 1040 g,1 normal cortical pattern, mild ventricular dilatation | Multiple regions | LM2 | Inc neurons in subcortical white matter; reduced myelin in cerebral white matter; siderosis of globus pallidus, inferior olivary heterotopia, |
| Rudelli | 23-, 24-week fetuses | Brains(2) showing normal cortical development; testes | Gross examination only | None noted | |
| Rudelli | 62-year-old male | Brain: mild cortical atrophy | Parieto-occipital neocortex | LM, Golgi, EM3 | Increased long, thin, immature spines; decreased synaptic length by EM |
| Desai | 33-year-old male with ALS4 | Brain (1850 g) with ALS pathology; testes | Whole brain | LM | Heterotopia of olivary nucleus; Subcortical white matter neuronal clusters |
| Hinton | 15-, 41-, 62-year-old male patients (62-year-old in Rudelli, 1985 [ | Brains (3):normal | Parieto-occipital neocortex | Golgi | Increased long, thin spines |
| Cingulate, temporal association cortex | Morphometric analysis | No significant differences in neuronal counts | |||
| Wisniewski, 1991 [ | 63-year-old man | Brain: mild atrophy, hydrocephalus, AVM5 of left temporal lobe | Unspecified neocortex | Golgi | Increased long, thin spines |
| Sabaratnam, 2000 [ | 67-, 87-year-old men | 67-year old (1778 g). 87-year-old: brain enlarged, ventricular dilatation | 87-year-old: hippocampus, cerebellum | LM | CA4 cell loss, gliosis; PC6 dropout, Bergmann gliosis |
| Irwin | 48-, 48-, 73-year-old men | Brain | Temporal and visual neocortex | Golgi | Increased long, thin spines; increase in spine density |
| Moro | 4.5-year-old and 13-year-old boys | Live patients | MRI7 | Periventricular heterotopias in both cases | |
1Brain weights within normal limits unless otherwise noted.
2Light microscopy, standard histologic stains.
3Electron microscopy.
4Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
5Arteriovenous malformation
6Purkinje cell.
7Magnetic resonance imaging.
Figure 1Hippocampal formation. Images of the hippocampal formation at the level of the lateral geniculate body from (A) patient 1 and (C) patient 3 show abnormal expansion of CA1 by increased numbers of pyramidal neurons. These are compared with the more usual hippocampal microarchitecture that shows a thinner linear band of neurons in CA1, as seen in (B) a 62-year-old male control. Haematoxylin and eosin, original magnification ×10; scale bar = 1 mm. Arrow indicates bulge/expansion composed of increased numbers of pyramidal cells in (A) patient 1 and (C) patient 3.
Figure 2Abnormalities in the cerebellum. Histologic abnormalities seen in FXS cerebella. (A) Decreased numbers of Purkinje cells (PCs) and clusters of PCs (arrows) in which cells are often misoriented. Haematoxylin and eosin, original magnification ×200; scale bar = 200 μm. (B) Patchy pallor of foliar white matter and increased variability in thickness of the internal granular cell layer (IGL). Arrows indicate foci of myelin pallor. Luxol fast blue-periodic-acid-Schiff (LFB-PAS), original magnification ×200; scale bar = 1 mm. (C) Diffuse axonal loss in cerebellar foliar white matter (FWM) (neurofilament immunohistochemistry, original magnification ×100; scale bar = 400 μm); (D) Activated astrocytes in foliar white matter, a finding not seen in deep cerebellar white matter. Arrows indicate abnormal astrocytes. (glial fibrillary acidic protein immunohistochemistry, original magnification ×200; scale bar = 200 μm). (E) Vascular hyalinosis within foliar white matter, as indicated by arrows. LFB-PAS, original magnification ×200; scale bar = 200 μm. (F) High magnification of foliar white matter axonal abnormalities that include axonal loss (arrowheads) and swollen axons, as indicated by arrows. Neurofilament immunohistochemistry, original magnification ×400; scale bar = 100 μm.
Figure 3Calbindin immunofluorescent staining in the cerebellar cortex. Calbindin immunofluorescent staining of the cerebellar cortex indicates decreased numbers of PCs and diminished complexity of the PC dendritic arborization compared with age-matched controls. Similar changes were observed in all vermal lobules and in lateral posterior lobe cortex. (A) Vermal inferior lobule and (B) lateral posterior lobe cerebellar cortex. Original magnification ×10; scale bar = 250 μm.
Figure 4Purkinje cell counts in the cerebellum. Purkinje cell (PC) counts in: (A) superior lobule; (B) posterior lobule; (C) inferior lobule; and (D) lateral cortex, in the three fragile X cases and age-matched controls.
Figure 5Foliar diameter in the cerebellum. Foliar width measurements in: (A) superior lobule; (B) posterior lobule; (C) inferior lobule; and (D) lateral cortex, in the three fragile X cases and age-matched controls.