| Literature DB >> 23393592 |
Malte Lenders1, Thomas Duning, Michael Schelleckes, Boris Schmitz, Sonja Stander, Arndt Rolfs, Stefan-Martin Brand, Eva Brand.
Abstract
White matter lesions (WML) are clinically relevant since they are associated with strokes, cognitive decline, depression, or epilepsy, but the underlying etiology in young adults without classical risk factors still remains elusive. Our aim was to elucidate the possible clinical diagnosis and mechanisms leading to WML in patients carrying the D313Y mutation in the α-galactosidase A (GLA) gene, a mutation that was formerly described as nonpathogenic. Pathogenic GLA mutations cause Fabry disease, a vascular endothelial glycosphingolipid storage disease typically presenting with a symptom complex of renal, cardiac, and cerebrovascular manifestations. We performed in-depths clinical, biochemical and genetic examinations as well as advanced magnetic resonance imaging analyses in a pedigree with the genetically determined GLA mutation D313Y. We detected exclusive neurologic manifestations of the central nervous system of the "pseudo"-deficient D313Y mutation leading to manifest WML in 7 affected adult family members. Furthermore, two family members that do not carry the mutation showed no WML. The D313Y mutation resulted in a normal GLA enzyme activity in leukocytes and severely decreased activities in plasma. In conclusion, our results provide evidence that GLA D313Y is potentially involved in neural damage with significant WML, demonstrating the necessity of evaluating patients carrying D313Y more thoroughly. D313Y might broaden the spectrum of hereditary small artery diseases of the brain, which preferably occur in young adults without classical risk factors. In view of the existing causal therapy regime, D313Y should be more specifically taken into account in these patients.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23393592 PMCID: PMC3564750 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0055565
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Pedigree and positions of D313Y and W349X in the GLA coding region.
(A) Pedigree. (B) Representative chromatograms showing nucleotide substitution at position +937 (G>T) in the GLA coding region. (C) Schematic overview of the GLA transcript including localizations of D313Y and W349X. The pedigree shows the complete family of index patient II.7. Black arrow in A labels index patient. Squares indicate males, circles indicate females. Diagonal lines indicate deceased family members. Dark grey, light grey, and white color in squares and circles indicates W349X, D313Y, and non-carriers, respectively. Scattered circles represent not sequenced patients. Red flags indicate patients with white matter lesions (WML) seen in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), green flags indicate control patients without WML. Patient’s age at MRI is given in years. D313Y results in single amino acid substitution at position +313, leading to a conversion of aspartate (Asp) to tyrosine (Tyr). W349X results in a c-terminal truncated GLA protein, due to a conversion of tryptophan (Trp) to a stop-codon. A: Adenine; C: Cytosine; G: Guanine; T: Thymine; TLS: translational start side; WT: wild-type GLA without any coding mutations.
Figure 2FLAIR- (A), T2- (B) and T1- (C) MR images of index patient II.7 showed widespread, punctuated (arrows) and confluent (yellow circles) WML from periventricular (yellow) to subcortical (red) without gadolinium enhancement.
Lesions were associated with “black holes” in T1-weigthed images (C) as a surrogate of severe demyelination and axonal injury. MR-angiography (D) showed no signs of cerebral vasculitis or intracranial arteriosclerosis.
Exclusion of risk factors and elicitors for white matter lesions in index patient II.7.
| sample/application | diagnostics/risk factors | results | |
|
| cerebrospinal fluid | beta-amyloid(1–42), total tau, hyperphosphorylated tau, malignant cells, oligoclonal bandsantibodies against: herpes simplex virus type 1 and 2, varicella zostervirus, epstein barr virus, treponema pallidum, JC virus, borreliaburgdorferi, mycobacterium tuberculosis, tropheryma whipplei, measlesPCR: herpes viridae, JC virus, mycobacterium tuberculosis | normal |
| blood | borrelia burgdorferi, treponema pallidum, HIV-1/2, aquaporin-4 waterchannel, thyroid peroxidase, thyreoglobulin, glutamatic acid decarboxylase,GQ1b, anti-cardiolipin immunoglobulin, angiotensin-converting enzymeonco-neural antibodies: anti-amphiphysin, anti-Ri, anti-Yo, anti-Hu,anti-CV2/CRMP5, anti-Ma2/Ta, anti-NMDA, LGI-1, GADCADASIL | normal | |
| arylsulfatase A activity, very long chain fatty acid levels | |||
| MR-angiography, catheter angiography | cerebral vasculitis | normal | |
| skin biopsy | small-fiber neuropathy | reduced IENF | |
|
| 24 h-blood pressure monitoring, PWV | arterial hypertension, arteriosclerosis, hyperlipidemia | normal |
|
| serum | eGFR | normal |
| ultrasonography | renal morphology | normal |
cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy;
intraepidermal nerve fiber;
pulse wave velocity;
electrocardiogram,
estimated glomerular filtration rate (Modification of Diet in Renal Disease [MDRD] formula; Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration [CKD-EPI] formula).
Two cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analyses after 4 and 7 months after first symptoms were performed.
Summary of investigated parameters and abnormalities as typical for FD.
| Laboratory FD parameters | FD typical abnormalities | ||||||||||
| Enzyme activity in | |||||||||||
| Patient | Sex | Age | CDS mutation | Plasma[nmol MU/h/ml] | Leukocytes[nmol MU/h/mg] | Lyso-Gb3[ng/ml] | GLA RNAexpression | GLA expression in plasma | Renal | Cardiac | Neurologic |
| II.3 | m | 71 | D313Y |
| 78 | 0.83 | yes | yes | no | no |
|
| II.4 | f | 74 | D313Y |
| 83 | 0.41 | yes | yes | no | no |
|
| II.6 | f | 76 | D313Y |
| 161 | 0.82 | yes | yes | no | no |
|
| II.7 | f | 58 | D313Y |
| 38 | 0.61 | yes | yes | no | no |
|
| III.7 | f | 38 | D313Y |
| 55 | 1.26 | n.d. | yes | no | no | n.d. |
| III.8 | f | 49 | D313Y |
| n.d | n.d. | yes | yes | no | no |
|
| III.11 | f | 34 | D313Y | n.d. | n.d. | 1.82 | n.d. | n.d. | no | no |
|
| III.14 | f | 41 | D313Y |
| 79 | 0.75 | yes | yes | no | no |
|
| III.16 | f | 25 | no | 9.14 | 57 | n.d. | yes | yes | no | no | no |
| III.17 | f | 31 | no | 10.1 | 64 | n.d. | yes | yes | no | no | No |
Renal parameters: ultrasonography, albumin/creatinine ratio, determination of eGFR. Cardiac parameters: echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and electrocardiogram. Neural/cerebral parameters: MRI, neurography and neuropsychologic diagnostics. Reference values: plasma activity >8.0 nmol MU/h/ml; leukocyte activity >33 nmol MU/h/mg protein; lyso-Gb3<1.84 ng/ml. n.d.: not determined; WML: white matter lesions. Abnormal findings are highlighted in bold.
Figure 3Punctuated (arrows) and confluent (yellow circles) WML were present on MR images (axial and sagittal FLAIR- and T2-sequences) of all six examined family members, all carrying D313Y.
Only patient II.3 had mild cardiovascular risk factors (treated arterial hypertension). Extent and lesion load were age-related, but WML were already present in young family members without any vascular risk factor (patient III.8, III.11 and III.14; 49, 34 and 41 years of age, respectively).
Figure 4MR images of family members that were negative for D313Y did not show any white matter changes.
Upper row: Sagittal FLAIR-sequence; median and lower row: Axial T2-weighted sequences of subject III.16 and III.17.