| Literature DB >> 25870938 |
C E Arber1, A Li2, H Houlden1, S Wray1.
Abstract
Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) is a group of disorders characterized by dystonia, parkinsonism and spasticity. Iron accumulates in the basal ganglia and may be accompanied by Lewy bodies, axonal swellings and hyperphosphorylated tau depending on NBIA subtype. Mutations in 10 genes have been associated with NBIA that include Ceruloplasmin (Cp) and ferritin light chain (FTL), both directly involved in iron homeostasis, as well as Pantothenate Kinase 2 (PANK2), Phospholipase A2 group 6 (PLA2G6), Fatty acid hydroxylase 2 (FA2H), Coenzyme A synthase (COASY), C19orf12, WDR45 and DCAF17 (C2orf37). These genes are involved in seemingly unrelated cellular pathways, such as lipid metabolism, Coenzyme A synthesis and autophagy. A greater understanding of the cellular pathways that link these genes and the disease mechanisms leading to iron dyshomeostasis is needed. Additionally, the major overlap seen between NBIA and more common neurodegenerative diseases may highlight conserved disease processes. In this review, we will discuss clinical and pathological findings for each NBIA-related gene, discuss proposed disease mechanisms such as mitochondrial health, oxidative damage, autophagy/mitophagy and iron homeostasis, and speculate the potential overlap between NBIA subtypes.Entities:
Keywords: NBIA; Tau; autophagy; mitochondria; neurodegeneration; α-synuclein
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25870938 PMCID: PMC4832581 DOI: 10.1111/nan.12242
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropathol Appl Neurobiol ISSN: 0305-1846 Impact factor: 8.090
Figure 1Cellular localization of NBIA‐associated genes. Iron (black circles) is taken up via transferrin‐mediated endocytosis (upper right). Cytoplasmic iron is stored in ferritin, made up of 24 monomers of ferritin light chain (FTL) and ferritin heavy chain. GPI‐anchored Ceruloplasmin (CP) facilitates Transferrin‐mediated cellular export of iron. Free CP is also present in serum. Mitochondria and lysosomes contain most of the total cellular iron. Pantothenate kinase 2 (PANK2) is a dimer and localized to intermembrane space of the mitochondria. CoA Synthase (COASY) and C19orf12 are currently believed to reside in the inner mitochondrial membrane and the outer mitochondrial membrane, respectively. COASY has a single transmembrane domain, and C19orf12 has two membrane spanning domains. Phospholipase A2 G6 (PLA2G6) is a cytoplasmic tetramer that, upon activation, can be oleoylated and associated to the plasma membrane, mitochondrial membranes, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and nuclear envelope. WDR45 is a seven bladed β‐propeller protein that binds to phosphoinositol‐3‐phosphate‐enriched membranes at the ER. Fatty acid hydroxylase 2 (FA2H) is a four‐pass protein located in the ER. ATP13A2 is a 10‐pass polypeptide that resides in the lysosomal compartment (dark vesicles) and possibly the mitochondrial inner membrane. Finally, DCAF17 is a single pass protein located in the nucleolus.
Clinical phenotype of NBIA disorders
| Gene | NBIA subtype | NBIA % | Associated diseases | Clinical symptoms | Onset | MRI characteristics | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Pantothenate kinase‐associated neurodegeneration (PKAN) (NBIA1) | 35–50 | HARP syndrome |
Dystonia, spasticity and Parkinsonism | Juvenile and adult onset (3 years or approximately 20 years) | Hypointensity with central hyperintensity of the GP, referred to as ‘eye of the tiger’ | Hayflick |
|
| COASY protein‐associated neurodegeneration (CoPAN) | <1 | – |
Spasticity, dystonia, dysarthria and Parkinsonism | Juvenile onset (2.5 years) | Hypointensity with central hyperintensity of the GP | Dusi |
|
| Mitochondrial membrane‐associated neurodegeneration (MPAN) (NBIA4) | 6–10 | SPG43 |
Spasticity, dystonia, dysarthria and Parkinsonism | Childhood onset (11 years) | Hypointensity of the GP and SN plus hyperintensity in the GP | Hartig |
|
| PLA2G6‐associated neurodegeneration (PLAN) (NBIA2) | 20 | INAD, Dystonia Parkinsonism (PARK14) |
Hypotonia, spasticity, dystonia, Parkinsonism and cerebellar ataxia. | Infantile, juvenile and late onset (1 year or 4 years or >18 years) |
Hypointensity of the GP in a subset of patients | Morgan |
|
| FA2H‐associated neurodegeneration (FAHN) | <1 | SPG35, Leukodystrophy | Spasticity, ataxia and dystonia | Childhood onset (4 years) |
Hypointensity of the GP | Kruer |
|
| β‐propeller‐associated neurodegeneration (BPAN) | 1–2 | SENDA |
Parkinsonism, dystonia and dementia | Childhood onset |
Hypointensity of the GP/SN with central hyperintense line | Hayflick |
|
| Kufor‐Rakeb syndrome | <1 | Juvenile onset Parkinsonism (PARK9), Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis | Parkinsonism, dementia and some pyramidal signs | Juvenile and late onset (<20 years and <40 years) | General atrophy and hypointensity in the basal ganglia/caudo‐putamen | Schneider |
|
| Woodhouse Sakati syndrome | <1 | Diabetes, alopecia, hypogonadism, deafness |
Dystonia | Juvenile to adult onset | Hypointensity of the GP and SN | Alazami |
|
| Aceruloplasminaemia | <1 | Diabetes and anaemia |
Dystonia, dyskinesia and cerebellar ataxia | Adult onset (51 years) | Hypointense striatum, thalamus and dentate | Yoshida |
|
| Neuroferritinopathy (NBIA3) | <1 | – |
Dystonia, spasticity, rigidity and Parkinsonism. | Adult onset (39 years) | Hypointensity in basal ganglia, especially GP and SN. Also motor cortex | Curtis |
Pathological findings from gene‐confirmed NBIA cases
| Gene | Gene confirmed pathology cases | Gross morphology findings | Iron | Axonal spheroids | Lewy body pathology | Tau pathology | Gliosis | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 9 |
Neuronal loss in GP. Reduced myelin |
GP |
GP | No | Occasional tangles and threads | GP and widespread | Kruer |
|
| 0 | Proposed similar to PANK2 | ||||||
|
| 2 |
Neuronal loss in GP. Reduced myelin |
GP |
GP |
Severe Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites |
Rare hyperphosphorylated Tau inclusions | Widespread | Hartig |
|
| 7 |
Cerebellar, cortical, GP and brain stem atrophy |
GP and sparse in SNr |
Severe |
Severe, Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites |
Early onset hyper phosphorylated Tau inclusions, threads and tangles | Variable | Gregory |
|
| 0 | Proposed brainstem atrophy and demyelination | Proposed white matter lesions and enlarged axons | |||||
|
| 1 |
SN > GP neuronal loss |
Strongest in SN | GP, SN plus thalamus | No | Tau tangles, hippocampus, cortex, putamen, few in atrophied SN and GP | Putamen and thalamus | Hayflick |
|
| 0 | Peripheral biopsies show demyelination and cytoplasmic inclusions in nerve and muscle tissue | ||||||
|
| 0 | Peripheral biopsies show denervation of muscle tissue | ||||||
|
| 6 |
Severe: putamen, dentate nucleus. Moderate: GP, cerebellum purkinje; mild: SN, cortex |
Similar to neurone loss, cerebellum, GP > SN, cortex | Iron laden ‘globular structures’ present in glia and variable in neurones | Unknown | Unknown | Yes | Gonzalez‐Cuyar |
|
| 4 |
Mild atrophy in the cerebellum, cortex, putamen |
Cerebellum and putamen |
Yes, GP, Ubq and NF | Unknown | Few | Yes, but some atrophy too | Curtis |
APP, amyloid precursor protein; GPe, globus pallidus externa; GPi, globus pallidus interna; NF, neurofilament; SNc, substantia nigra pars compacta; SNr, substantia nigra pars reticulata; Ubq, ubiquitin; α‐syn, alpha synuclein.
Figure 2Cellular iron homeostasis and putative involvement of NBIA‐associated genes. Iron is taken up via transferrin‐mediated endocytosis and a theorized cytoplasmic pool of free iron is termed the LIP. Free iron is safely stored within Ferritin macromolecules, via Ferritin heavy chain and FTH. Cellular iron export is facilitated via the ferroxidase activity of Ceruloplasmin. High iron concentration is required in mitochondria; however, no mitochondrial iron exporter has been found. Mitophagy is one potential mechanism for iron recycling, and several NBIA‐related genes may alter the rate of mitophagy, PANK2, COASY, C19orf12 and PLA2G6. Autophagy and mitophagy are intrinsically related, and WDR45 mutations may alter the rate of these recycling processes. FA2H and PLA2G6 may impinge on autophagy via membrane remodelling and vesicle formation. ATP13A2 has a role in divalent ion transport into the lysosome compartment, and this could include/affect iron transport into the iron‐rich lysosomal compartment. DCAF17 has not been linked to iron homeostasis. Mitochondrial‐rich vesicles have been described to be exocytosed and, together with theorized lysosomal‐derived exosomes, may represent another cellular iron secretory mechanism. Grey arrows represent theorized steps in the pathway. Black circles represent iron.