| Literature DB >> 25758715 |
Saadet Mercimek-Mahmutoglu1,2,3, Sarah Sidky4, Keith Hyland5, Jaina Patel6, Elizabeth J Donner7, William Logan8, Roberto Mendoza-Londono9, Mahendranath Moharir10, Julian Raiman11, Andreas Schulze12,13, Komudi Siriwardena14, Grace Yoon15,16, Lianna Kyriakopoulou17.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inherited neurotransmitter disorders are primary defects of neurotransmitter metabolism. The main purpose of this retrospective cohort study was to identify prevalence of inherited neurotransmitter disorders.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25758715 PMCID: PMC4342151 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-015-0234-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Figure 1The monoamine neurotransmitter pathway. Abbreviations: GTP = guanosine triphosphate; GTPCH = guanosine triphosphate cyclohydrolase 1; PTPS = 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase; SR = sepiapterin reductase; BH4 = tetrahydrobiopterin; TH = tyrosine hydroxylase; DHPR = dihydropteridine reductase; qBH2 = quinonoid dihydrobiopterin; 5-HTP = 5-hydroxytryptophan; L-dopa = levodihydroxyphenylalanine; PLP = pyridoxal phosphate; AADC = aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase; 5-HIAA = 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid; HVA = homovanillic acid; MHPG = 3-methoxy-4-hydroxylphenylglycol; VMA = vanillylmandelic acid.
Figure 2Distribution of 154 study patients with or without genetic diagnosis.
Demographics and clinical features of the patients with inherited neurotransmitter disorders and non-neurotransmitter disorders
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| 6 | 14 |
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| 3.8 ± 6.0 SD months (1 day to 17 months) | 10.5 ± 16.2 SD months (1 day to 60 months) |
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| 26.5 ± 42.6 SD months (1 to 120 months) | 75.3 ± 64.8 SD months (7 to 216 months) |
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| 5.8 ± 4.4 SD years (1 to 14 years) | 10.3 ± 6.4 SD years (3 to 19 years) |
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| AR (5 patients, 83%) AD (1 patient, 17%) | AR (6 patients, 43%) AD (5 patients, 36%) X-linked (1 patient, 7%) Other (2 patients, 14%) |
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| 2 patients (33%) | None |
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| 2 patients (33%) | 5 patients (36%) |
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| 2 patients (33%) | 8 patients (57%) |
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| None (0%) | 1 patient (7%) |
Abbreviations: SD standard deviation, AR autosomal recessive, AD autosomal dominant, GDD global developmental delay.
Clinical features and diagnostic yield of the patients who underwent CSF neurotransmitter measurements including the inherited neurotransmitter and non-neurotransmitter disorders
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| Movement disorder and/or GDD | 38 (25%) | 2 patients | 1 patient |
| GDD and movement disorder and epilepsy | 18 (12%) | None | 4 patients |
| GDD and epilepsy | 66 (44%) | 2 patients | 7 patients |
| GDD and hypotonia | 26 (17.5%) | None | 2 patients |
| Newborn screening positive for PKU | 2 (1.5%) | 2 patients | None |
Abbreviations: GDD global developmental delay, PKU phenylketonuria.
Patients with confirmed inherited neurotransmitter disorders
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| 1/M/9 yr/DHPR def | NBS-Pos-PKU/7 d/<15 d |
| Homozygous novel IVS5+ 1 G > T in | L-dopa/carbidopa 9 mg/kg/d,5-HTP 7.5 mg/kg/d/severe GDD |
| 2/F/3 yr/PTPS def | NBS-Pos-PKU/6 d/12 d |
| Homozygous known [ | L-dopa/carbidopa 7.13 mg/kg/d,5-HTP 2.59 mg/kg/d, sapropterin 2 mg/kg/d)/normal |
| 3/F/14 yr/GTPCH def | GM delay, ataxia, tremor/17 mo/10 yr |
| Heterozygous known [ | L-dopa/carbidopa 8.5 mg/kg/d/executive dysfunction, intermittent dystonia, seizures |
| 4/F/3 yr/TH def | GDD, choreoathetosis, dystonia/2 mo/24 mo |
| Homozygous known [ | L-dopa/carbidopa 7.5 mg/kg/d/severe GDD, spasticity |
| 5/F/5 yr/PDE- | Seizures, GDD/3.5 mo/11 mo |
| Homozygous novel IVS-12(+1) G > A in | Pyridoxine 200 m/d/seizure free, severe GDD |
| 6/F/1 yr/PNPO def | Neonatal MS, GTS/1 d/2 mo | N/N/ | Homozygous known [ | PLP 35 mg/k/d/seizure free, normal development |
Abbreviations: CSF cerebral spinal fluids, HVA homovanillic acid, 5-HIAA 5-hydroxyindol acetic acid, 3-OMD 3-O-methyldopa, LP lumbar puncture, THB tetrahydrobiopterin, Neo neopterin, DHPR dihydropterine reductase, def deficiency, GA-I glutaric aciduria type I, NBS-Pos-PKU newborn screening positive for phenylketonuria, d day(s), mo month(s), GDD global developmental delay, NP not performed, ProReD protein restricted diet, 5-HTP 5-hydroxytryptophane, PKU phenylketonuria, PTPS 6-pyruvoyl-tetrahydropterin synthase, GTPCH guanosine triphosphate cyclohydrolase, GM gross motor, TH tyrosine hydroxylase, PDE- ALDH7A1 pyridoxine dependent epilepsy caused by mutations in the ALDH7A1 gene, PNPO pyridox(am)ine-5-phosphate oxidase, MS myoclonic seizures, GTS generalized tonic seizures, PLP pyridoxal-5-phosphate, yr year(s), GTCS generalized tonic-clonic seizures. 3: ; ↑ = elevated; ↓ = decreased.
*Age appropriate reference ranges for CSF neurotransmitters and amino acids: CSF HVA: 0–0.2 years = 337–1299 nmol/L; 0.2 - 0.5 years = 450–1132 nmol/L; 0.5 – 2 years = 294 – 1115 nmol/L; 2 – 5 years = 233–928 nmol/L; 5 – 10 years = 218–852 nmol/L; 10 – 15 years = 167–563 nmol/L; adults = 145–324 nmol/L.
CSF 5HIAA: 0–0.2 years = 208 – 1159 nmol/L; 0.2 - 0.5 years = 179 – 711 nmol/L; 0.5 - 2 years = 129 – 520 nmol/L; 2 – 5 years = 74 – 345 nmol/L; 5 – 10 years = 66 – 338 nmol/L; 10 – 15 years = 67 – 189; adults = 67–140 nmol/L.
CSF 3-O-MD: 0–0.2 years = <300 nmol/L; 0.2 - 0.5 years = <300 nmol/L; 0.5 – 2 years = <300 nmol/L; 2 – 5 years = <150 nmol/L; 5 – 10 years = <100 nmol/L; 10 – 15 years = <100 nmol/L; adults = <100 nmol/L.
CSF tetrahydrobiopterin: 0–0.2 years = 40–105 nmol/L; 0.2-0.5 years = 23–98 nmol/L; 0.5-2 years = 18–58 nmol/L; 5–10 years = 9–40 nmol/L; 10–15 years = 9–32 nmol/L; adults = 10–30 nmol/L.
CSF neopterin: 0–0.2 years = 7–65 nmol/L; 0.2-0.5 years = 7–65 nmol/L; 0.5-2 years = 7–65 nmol/L; 2–5 years = 7–65 nmol/L; 5–10 years = 7–40 nmol/L; 10–15 years = 8–33 nmol/L; adults = 8–28 nmol/L.
CSF threonine: 28–92 μmol/L.
Patients with non-neurotransmitter disorders with a confirmed inherited metabolic or genetic disease
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| 1/F/4 yr/MTHFR def. | GDD, epilepsy, tremor/4 d/10 mo | N/ | Homozygous novel c.379C > T (p.His127Tyr) in |
| 2/F/3 yr/cobolamin G def. | GDD, epilepsy/2 mo/7 mo |
| Homozygous known [ |
| 3/M/11 yr GLUT1 def. | GDD, epilepsy, 2 yr/11 yr | N/N/N/glucose 2.1 (8 yr) | Heterozygous, |
| 4/F/16 yr/calcium channelopathy | GDD, epilepsy, ataxia, tremor/15 mo/10 yr | ↓123/N/N (10 yr) | Heterozygous, de novo, novel c.2134A > G (p.Ile712Val) in |
| 5/M/8 yr/calcium channelopathy | GDD, epilepsy, left hemiparesis/6 mo/4 yr | N/N/N (2 yr) | Heterozygous, de novo, novel c.4046G > A (p.Arg1349Glu) in |
| 6/F/13 yr/ataxia-oculomotor apraxia type 1 | GDD, ataxia, dysarthria, epilepsy/ 1.5 yr/12 yr | N/↓50/N (7 yr) | Homozygous 0.132 MB deletion at 9p21.1 in aCGH loss of both copies of |
| 7/F/19 yr/HSP type 11 | GDD, rigidity, spasticity, dystonia/5 yr/18 yr | N/N/N (16 yr) | Heterozygous known [ |
| 8/M/11 yr/Allen-Herdon-Dudley synd. | GDD, epilepsy, hypotonia/1 yr/9 yr | ↓145/N/N (7 yr) | Heterozygous novel c.869C > T (p.Ser290Phe) in |
| 9/M/passed away/ Prader-Willi synd. | Hypotonia/birth/8 mo following death | N/N/N (2 wk) | Abnormal methylation of |
| 10/F/4 yr/KCNQ2 EE | GDD, epilepsy/1 wk/4.5 yr | N/N/N (1 mo) | Heterozygous, de novo, novel c.700A > C (p.Thr234Pro) in |
| 11/ F/3 yr/STXBP1 EE | GDD, epilepsy/birth/4 yr | N/N/N (3mo) | Heterozygous, de novo, novel c.364C > T (p.Arg122X) in |
| 12/ M/8 mo/hyperekplexia | GDD, epilepsy, central hypotonia/birth/7 mo | N/N/N (1mo) | Homozygous known [ |
| 13/ M/2 yr/chromosomal abnormality | GDD, epilepsy/birth/1 yr | N/N/N (7mo) | Novel 20q13.33 1.2 Mb deletion on aCGH |
| 14/M/passed away (2 mo)/asparagine synthetase def. | GDD, hypotonia/2 mo | ↓240/ ↓183/N (2mo) | Homozygous known [ |
Abbreviations: CSF cerebral spinal fluids, HVA homovanillic acid, 5-HIAA 5-hydroxyindol acetic acid, 3-OMD 3-O-methyldopa, LP lumbar puncture, def. deficiency, MTHF methylenetetrahydrofolate, d day(s), mo month(s), yr year(s), GDD global developmental delay, N normal, GLUT1 glucose transporter 1. 3: ; ↑ = elevated; ↓ = decreased.
*Age appropriate reference ranges for CSF neurotransmitters, amino acids and glucose: CSF HVA: 0–0.2 years = 337–1299 nmol/L; 0.2 - 0.5 years = 450–1132 nmol/L; 0.5 – 2 years = 294 – 1115 nmol/L; 2 – 5 years = 233–928 nmol/L; 5 – 10 years = 218–852 nmol/L; 10 – 15 years = 167–563 nmol/L; adults = 145–324 nmol/L.
CSF 5HIAA: 0–0.2 years = 208 – 1159 nmol/L; 0.2 - 0.5 years = 179 – 711 nmol/L; 0.5 - 2 years = 129 – 520 nmol/L; 2 – 5 years = 74 – 345 nmol/L; 5 – 10 years = 66 – 338 nmol/L; 10 – 15 years = 67 – 189; adults = 67–140 nmol/L.
CSF 3-O-MD: 0–0.2 years = <300 nmol/L; 0.2 - 0.5 years = <300 nmol/L; 0.5 – 2 years = <300 nmol/L; 2 – 5 years = <150 nmol/L; 5 – 10 years = <100 nmol/L; 10 – 15 years = <100 nmol/L; adults = <100 nmol/L.
CSF MTHF: 40–120 nmol/L all age groups.
CSF glucose: 2.1-3.6 mmol/L.