| Literature DB >> 29594088 |
Sören Bäumner1, Lutz T Weber1.
Abstract
Cystinosis is a rare autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disorder caused by mutations in the CTNS gene. Main dysfunction is a defective clearance of cystine from lysosomes that leads to accumulation of cystine crystals in every tissue of the body. There are three different forms: infantile nephropathic cystinosis, which is the most common form, juvenile nephropatic, and non-nephropathic cystinosis. Mostly, first symptom in infantile nephropathic cystinosis is renal Fanconi syndrome that occurs within the first year of life. Another prominent symptom is photophobia due to corneal crystal deposition. Cystine depletion therapy with cysteamine delays end-stage renal failure but does not stop progression of the disease. A new cysteamine formulation with delayed-release simplifies the administration schedule but still does not cure cystinosis. Even long-term depletion treatment resulting in bypassing the defective lysosomal transporter cannot reverse Fanconi syndrome. A future perspective offering a curative therapy may be transplantation of CTNS-carrying stem cells that has successfully been performed in mice.Entities:
Keywords: CTNS gene; cysteamine; hematopoietic stem cell therapy; nephropathic cystinosis; renal Fanconi syndrome
Year: 2018 PMID: 29594088 PMCID: PMC5861330 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2018.00058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Diagnosis of cystinosis by measuring cystine levels.
| Normal | ≤0.2 nmol hemicystine/mg protein |
| Nephropathic cystinosis | 5.0–23.0 nmol hemicystine/mg protein |
| Non-nephropathic cystinosis | 1.0–3.0 nmol hemicystine/mg protein |
| Heterozygous carrier | ≤1.0 nmol hemicystine/mg protein |
| Target levels for treated nephropathic cystinosis | <0.5–1.0 nmol hemicystin/mg protein |
Figure 1Possible symptoms and disease manifestations of nephropathic cystinosis.
Figure 2Corneal slit-lamp examination of three patients with nephropathic cystinosis. (A) High magnificent slit beam view of cornea with cystine crystals. (B) Retroillumination showing marked diffuse crystals packed within the cornea. (C) Retroillumination with patient looking down showing the extent of crystal deposition up to the peripheral edge of the cornea. With friendly permission from Clinical Ophtalmology, Dove Press (27).
Figure 3Intracellular cystine metabolism. Cystine normally leaves the lysosome via cystinosin by cystine-proton symport (yellow arrows). Mutations in the CTNS gene cause cystine accumulation in the lysosome due to dysfunction of cystinosin (black arrows). Cystin accumulates and forms crystals inside the lysosome. Cysteamine induces a chemical reaction resulting in cysteamine–cysteine and cysteine. Both molecules exit the lysosome bypassing the cystinosin transporter protein (green arrows). Adapted from Ref. (6).