| Literature DB >> 21369419 |
P M Aswathy1, P S Jairani, P S Mathuranath.
Abstract
Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) is a highly heterogenous group of progressive neurodegenerative disorders characterized by atrophy of prefrontal and anterior temporal cortices. Recently, the research in the field of FTLD has gained increased attention due to the clinical, neuropathological, and genetic heterogeneity and has increased our understanding of the disease pathogenesis. FTLD is a genetically complex disorder. It has a strong genetic basis and 50% of patients show a positive family history for FTLD. Linkage studies have revealed seven chromosomal loci and a number of genes including MAPT, PGRN, VCP, and CHMB-2B are associated with the disease. Neuropathologically, FTLD is classified into tauopathies and ubiquitinopathies. The vast majority of FTLD cases are characterized by pathological accumulation of tau or TDP-43 positive inclusions, each as an outcome of mutations in MAPT or PGRN, respectively. Identification of novel proteins involved in the pathophysiology of the disease, such as progranulin and TDP-43, may prove to be excellent biomarkers of disease progression and thereby lead to the development of better therapeutic options through pharmacogenomics. However, much more dissections into the causative pathways are needed to get a full picture of the etiology. Over the past decade, advances in research on the genetics of FTLD have revealed many pathogenic mutations leading to different clinical manifestations of the disease. This review discusses the current concepts and recent advances in our understanding of the genetics of FTLD.Entities:
Keywords: Frontotemporal lobar degeneration; TDP-43; genetic risk factors; microtubule-associated protein tau; mutations; progranulin
Year: 2010 PMID: 21369419 PMCID: PMC3039162 DOI: 10.4103/0972-2327.74246
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Indian Acad Neurol ISSN: 0972-2327 Impact factor: 1.383
Features of FTLD
| Nature of manifestation | Insidious onset and gradual progression |
|---|---|
| Age at onset | Variable and ranges from 21–85 years |
| Sex distribution | Equal incidence |
| Duration of illness | 8 years (3 years in FTD-MND) |
| Family History | Present in 50% |
| Common clinical manifestation | Behavioral change (disinhibition, apathy, and stereotypic behaviors) |
| Clinical subtypes | FTD (70%), PNFA (10%), SD (15%) |
| Microscopic features | Microvacuolation, Neuronal loss, and Gliosis |
| Neuropathological subtypes | FTLD-tau and FTLD-U |
| Cognitive features | Executive deficits, change in speech and language |
| Neurological signs | Parkinsonism or MND |
| Neuroimaging | Symmetric atrophy of pre-frontal and anterior temporal lobes |
| Genetic Linkage | Chromosome 17q21, 17q24, 9p, 9q, and 3 with 7 loci |
| Genes identified | |
| Environmental Risk factors | Family history, trauma, thyroid disease, psychiatric illness etc. |
FTD-MND- Frontotemporal dementia-Motor Neuron Disease, PNFA-Primary Non Fluent Aphasia, SD-Semantic Dementia, FTLD-U-Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration with Ubiquitin positive inclusions, MAPT-Microtubule-Associated Protein Tau, PGRN-Progranulin, VCP-Valosin Containing Protein, CHMB2BCharged Multi-Vesicular protein 2B
Clinical, neuropathological, and genetic characteristics of frontotemporal lobar degeneration
| Clinical features | Chromosomal location | Name of gene | Frontotemporal lobar degeneration Neuropathology |
|---|---|---|---|
| FTDP-17 | 17q21.32 | Neuronal and glial tau positive inclusions | |
| FTLD-U | 17q21.32 | Ubiquitinated-TDP-43 positive NCIs, NIIs and DNs | |
| FTLD-3 | 3p11.2 | CHMP2B | Ubiquitinated TDP-43 negative NCIs |
| IBMPFD | 9p13.3 | VCP | Ubiquitinated TDP-43 positive NIIs and DNs |
| FTD-ALS | 3p12 | CHMP2B | No distinctive features |
NCIs-Neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions; NIIs- neuronal intranuclear inclusions; DNs-Dystrophic neuritis.
Figure 1Schematic representation of the chromosomal location, genomic, and protein structures of PGRN and MAPT: (A) Structure of PGRN gene: Human PGRN located on chromosome 17 consists of 13 exons (1 noncoding and 12 coding exons). All coding exons are transcribed into mRNA, which on translation produces a full length secreted precursor protein comprised of 7.5 tandem repeats of 12 cysteinyl granulin motifs, separated by linker sequences. It is cleaved into paragranulin (P) and granulins (A-G) by elastases. (A) Structure of MAPT: Alternative splicing of MAPT generates six different tau isoforms by splicing in and out exons 2 and 3 in the N-terminal domain and exon 10 in the C-terminal domain, which results in 4R and 3R tau, respectively, named as 2N4R(441aa), 1N4R(412aa), 0N4R (383aa) 2N3R(410aa), 1N3R(381aa), 0N3R(352aa). a) Genomic structure, b) Transcription, c) Translation and Alternative splicing of MAPT gene, d) Translation of PGRN mRNA into progranulin protein
Figure 2Schematic representation of functional domains of longest tau isoform (2N4R): The N-terminal projection domain is highly acidic and is followed by proline-rich region that interact with the cytoskeletal elements and plasma membrane to determine the spacing between microtubules in axons and signal transduction. C-terminal microtubule binding domain harbor microtubule binding repeats, pseudorepeats and C-terminal end and appears to regulate the polymerization and stabilization of microtubules
Examples for the correlation between genotype-phenotype in frontotemporal lobar degeneration
| Location of | Predominant isoform composition | Cellular pathology | Morphology of filaments | Clinical presentation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exon10 | 4R | Neuronal and Glial | Twisted ribbon-like filaments | FTDP-17 |
| PSP | ||||
| CBD | ||||
| Intron 10 | 4R | Neuronal and Glial | Wide-twisted ribbons | FTDP-17 |
| PSP | ||||
| CBD | ||||
| Missense mutations outside Exon10 | 3R | Neuronal | PHFs and SFs | FTDP-17 |
PHFs-Paired helical filaments; SD-Semantic dementia; FTDP-17-Frontotemporal dementia with parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17; PSP-Progressive supranuclear palsy; CBD-Corticobasal degeneration.
Figure 3Schematic diagram of TDP-43 protein with functional domains: It contains two RNA recognition motifs (RRM 1 and 2) able to bind UG repeats in RNA as well as a glycine-rich C-terminal sequence. These features may be essential for TDP-43 to carry out its role in exon skipping and splicing inhibitory activity, which requires the C-terminal domain of TDP-43 through interaction with several members of the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein family associated with mRNA processing. NLS-Nuclear localization sequence, NES-Nuclear export sequence
Neuropathological subtypes of frontotemporal lobar degeneration-U showing heterogeneous TDP-43 pathology
| Type 1 (27%) | Type 2 (42%) | Type 3 (32%) | Type 4 (rare) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pathology | Predominant neurites | Predominant NCIs | Small neurite and NCIs | Numerous NIIS and small neurites |
| Clinical symptom | SD | FTD/ FTD-MND | FTD/PNFA | IBMPFD |
| Distribution | Superficial cortical layers | Superficial and deep Cortical layers | Superficial cortical layers | Layer II of cerebral cortex |
| Glial pathology | Absent-rare | Moderate-frequent | Moderate-frequent | Absent |
| Genetic loci | Not yet identified | 9p linkage | VCP |
SD-Semantic dementia; PNFA-Progressive nonfluent aphasia; FTD-Frontotemporal dementia; MND-Motor Neuron Disease; PGRN-progranulin; VCP-Valosin-containing protein; IBMPFD-Inclusion body myopathy and Paget’s disease of bone; NCIs- intraneuronal cytoplasmic inclusions; NIIs-neuronal intranuclear inclusions.
Figure 4Overall view of the pathological subtypes and associated genes in frontotemporal lobar degeneration