| Literature DB >> 23787031 |
Sean N Prater, Trusha T Patel, Anne F Buckley, Hanna Mandel, Eugene Vlodavski, Suhrad G Banugaria, Erin J Feeney, Nina Raben, Priya S Kishnani.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pompe disease is an autosomal recessive metabolic neuromuscular disorder caused by a deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA). It has long been believed that the underlying pathology leading to tissue damage is caused by the enlargement and rupture of glycogen-filled lysosomes. Recent studies have also implicated autophagy, an intracellular lysosome-dependent degradation system, in the disease pathogenesis. In this study, we characterize the long-term impact of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with recombinant human GAA (rhGAA) on lysosomal glycogen accumulation and autophagy in some of the oldest survivors with classic infantile Pompe disease (IPD).Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23787031 PMCID: PMC3691834 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-8-90
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Baseline demographics, mutations, and clinico-pathological data for the 8 patients with classic infantile Pompe disease
| 1. Male, Israeli Druze + | c.1210G > A (p.Asp404Asn) | 0 | 1.1 | 20/40 | Q, 1.0 | Good response; only articulatory disorder remains after 103.9 mo. | Present in 2% of fibers (biopsy after 96 mo. of ERT) |
| Q, 13.1 | |||||||
| c.1064 T > C (p.Leu355Pro) | |||||||
| Q, 97.1 | |||||||
| 2. Male, Israeli Druze + | c.1064 T > C (p.Leu355Pro) homozygous | 4.0; 2.6 CGA | 7.0; 5.6 CGA | 20 | Q, 6.7/ 5.3 | Initial developmental progress; decline in muscle strength and function after 89 mo. | Prominent after 96 mo. of ERT; autofluorescent inclusions |
| Q, 19.0/ 17.6 | |||||||
| Q, 103.0/101.6 | |||||||
| 3. Female, Hispanic + | c.1802C > T* (p.Ser601Leu) | 0.2;−0.3 CGA | 5.4; 4.9 CGA | 20/40 | Q, 5.3/4.8 | Initial developmental progress and motor gains; decline after 56 mo. | Detected on PAS-stained sections after 12 mo. of ERT |
| Q, 17.4/16.9 | |||||||
| c.1099 T > C (p.Trp367Arg) | |||||||
| Q, 90.4/ 89.9 | |||||||
| 4. Male, Caucasian + | c.525delT (p.Glu176ArgfsX45) | 0;−0.3 CGA | 0.5; 0.2 CGA | 20 | Q, 77.5/77.2 | Good response; normal gross motor development, no hypernasal speech up to 81.1 mo. | Present in 60-70% of fibers (biopsy after 77 mo. of ERT); autofluorescent inclusions |
| c.1642G > T† (p.Val548Phe) | |||||||
| 5. Male, Caucasian + | c.1933G > A (p.Asp645Asn) homozygous | 2.7 | 2.9 | 20/40 | SCM, 85.9 | Motor decline after 35 mo.; gastrostomy tube supplementation | Present in >10% of fibers (biopsies after 83–84 mo. of ERT) |
| Q, 86.9 | |||||||
| 6. Female, Caucasian + | c.655G > A (p.Gly219Arg) homozygous | 6.5; 5.5 CGA | 7.0; 6.0 CGA | 20/40 | Q, 56.0/55.0 | Motor decline after 14 mo.; gastrostomy tube supplementation | Present in occasional fibers (biopsy after 49 mo. of ERT) |
| 7. Female, African-Am. - | c.2560C > T (p.Arg854X) homozygous | 5.5; 5.0 CGA | 6.3; 5.8 CGA | 20 | Strap, 7.3/6.8 | Limited motor gains, invasive ventilation and gastrojejunostomy tube; death at 21 mo. of age | Not identifiable due to severe muscle deterioration |
| Q, 20.3/19.8 | |||||||
| 8. Female, Hispanic - | c.1195-18_2190-20del (p.Asp399ValfsX6) homozygous | 5.2 | 6.0 | 20/40‡ | S, 24.0 | Severe motor impairment; ventilator support and gastrojejunostomy tube | Not identifiable due to severe muscle deterioration |
*Allele has two polymorphic sites: c.1726G > A (p.Gly576Ser), c.2065G > A (p.Glu689Lys).
†Allele contains c.1880C > T nucleotide change (p.Ser627Phe); function unknown.
‡Patient 8 received cumulative dose of 40 mg/kg (20 mg/kg weekly). The regimen was increased after one month of therapy.
§Cardiac improvement seen in all patients.
Q: quadriceps muscle.
SCM: sternocleidomastoid muscle.
Strap: anterior neck “strap” muscle.
S: soleus muscle.
+: CRIM-positive.
-: CRIM-negative.
Figure 1Cumulative biweekly dose (mg/kg) of alglucosidase alfa enzyme replacement therapy versus time (months) for the 8 patients with classic infantile Pompe disease.
Figure 2Analysis of quadriceps muscle biopsy from Patient 1 prior to and following 12 and 96 months of ERT. (A) Epon-embedded PAS/Richardson’s-stained section shows mild to extensive vacuolation in many fibers (magnification 25×). (B) At a higher magnification (200×), it is evident that nearly all fibers are at least mildly affected. (C, D) After 12 months of ERT (age 13.1 months), no effaced fibers are seen, and there is much less glycogen overall (100× and 200×, respectively). (E, F) After 96 months of ERT (age 97.1 months), there is only subtle microvacuolar damage in occasional fibers and no evident glycogen accumulation (100× and 630×, respectively). (G, H) H&E-stained paraffin and PAS-D sections (25× and 630×, respectively) show little interstitial stroma in otherwise normal-looking fibers. (I, top and bottom) LAMP2/LC3 staining (lysosomes: green; autophagosomes: red) demonstrates mostly intact muscle fibers (for example, top); autophagic pathology can be seen in ~2% of fibers (bottom; arrowheads). Bar: 10 μm.
Figure 3Analysis of muscle biopsies from Patient 7 after 1 and 14 months of ERT. A-D: Anterior neck “strap” muscle biopsy taken after 1 month of ERT (age 7.3 months, or 6.8 months CGA). (A) H&E-stained frozen section shows the extent of damage and fibrosis: vacuolation of more than 90% of myocytes; complete loss of myofibrillar architecture in 10% of myocytes (magnification 25×). (B) PAS-D staining demonstrates vacuolation of most fibers and increased interstitial stroma; however, much of the internal fiber architecture is preserved (630×). (C) Epon-embedded toluidine blue-stained section highlights the partial replacement of sarcoplasm by vesicular structures (630×). (D) LAMP2/LC3 immunostaining demonstrates extensive damage with only partial preservation of muscle structure (i.e., striations in the top two and bottom fibers); bright green staining, particularly in the middle fiber, likely indicates the presence of remnants of lysosomal membranes. Bar: 10 μm. (E) H&E-stained section of post-treatment quadriceps muscle from autopsy (i.e., after 14 months of ERT; age 20.3 months, or 19.8 months CGA) shows extensive damage, which appears to be more severe than that in the pre-ERT biopsy (25×).