| Literature DB >> 30147320 |
Eva Bagyinszky1, Vo Van Giau1, Young Chul Youn2, Seong Soo A An1, SangYun Kim3.
Abstract
Abnormal prion proteins are responsible for several fatal neurodegenerative diseases in humans and in animals, including Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker disease, and fatal familial insomnia. Genetics is important in prion diseases, but in the most cases, cause of diseases remained unknown. Several mutations were found to be causative for prion disorders, and the effect of mutations may be heterogeneous. In addition, different prion mutations were suggested to play a possible role in additional phenotypes, such as Alzheimer's type pathology, spongiform encephalopathy, or frontotemporal dementia. Pathogenic nature of several prion mutations remained unclear, such as M129V and E219K. These two polymorphic sites were suggested as either risk factors for different disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease (AD), variant CJD, or protease-sensitive prionopathy, and they can also be disease-modifying factors. Pathological overlap may also be possible with AD or progressive dementia, and several patients with prion mutations were initially diagnosed with AD. This review also introduces briefly the diagnosis of prion diseases and the issues with their diagnosis. Since prion diseases have quite heterogeneous phenotypes, a complex analysis, a combination of genetic screening, cerebrospinal fluid biomarker analysis and imaging technologies could improve the early disease diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease; Gerstmann–Sträussler–Scheinker disease; PRNP gene; diagnosis; fatal familial insomnia; genetics; mutation; prion
Year: 2018 PMID: 30147320 PMCID: PMC6097508 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S165445
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Figure 13D structure of normal PrP protein. Normal PrP contains 3α helices and two β sheets.
Abbreviations: GPI, glycosylphosphatidylinositol; 3D, three dimensional; PrP, prion protein.
Mutations may be involved in CJD (and FFI)
| Mutation | Age onset | Family history | Clinical phenotype | Regions where the mutation was reported |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| D178N | Highly variable | Usually familial | CJD and FFI | USA |
| V180I | Mostly in the elder ages, 60s–70s | Familial and sporadic | Slow disease progression | Korea, Japan, USA, France |
| T188K | Mostly in the elder ages | Sporadic or unknown | Dementia, ataxia, drastic visual problems | Germany, Australia, China |
| E196K | 60s–70s–80s | Sporadic or unknown | CJD, atypical form of CJD | France, China, Germany |
| E196A | 70s | De novo | CJD, memory decline, personality changes appeared in the patient, followed by motor aphasia | China |
| E200K | Wide range, 30s–60s | Familial and sporadic | CJD, neuronal loss, and spongiform degeneration | Jewish patients in Libya, other Asian and European countries |
| E200G | NA | Sporadic | CJD | UK |
| V203I | Later lifetime, 70s–80s | Mostly sporadic | Monocular diplopia and dizziness, later confusion and hallucinations | France, Korea, China, Japan |
| R208H | Variable, 45–69 years | Sporadic or unknown | CJD, anorexia, ataxia, agitation, and cognitive decline | Europe, China |
| V210I | Variable | Familial or de novo | Typical CJD | Europe, Japan, Korea, Africa |
| E211Q | Later lifetime, 70s–80s | Familial | CJD, personality changes, ataxia, myoclonus, and rapidly progressive dementia | France, Italy |
| I215V | 50s or 70s | De novo | AD or CJD | Spain |
| M232R | Variable | Familial and sporadic | Rapid, typical CJD | Asia: Korea, China, Japan |
| Double octapeptide deletion | Unknown | Unknown | CJD and rapidly progressive dementia | USA |
| Octapeptide insertions | Mostly early onset | Mostly familial | 1–9 octapeptide insertions | Europe, Asia |
Abbreviations: CJD, Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease; FFI, fatal familial insomnia; CNS, central nervous system; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; DLB, dementia with Lewy bodies; NA, not available.
Mutations may be involved in GSS
| Mutation | Age of onset | Family history | Clinical phenotype | Regions where the mutation was reported |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| P102L | Mostly in the 60s of patient, but sometimes earlier | Familial and sporadic | DLB such as classical CJD-like symptoms or rapidly progressive dementia | Europe and Asia |
| P105L | In the 40s–50s | Familial or de novo | Mostly GSS, but it also appeared in spastic paraparesis and progressive dementia | Japan |
| A117V | Variable | Mostly familial | Progressive cortical dementia and cerebellar ataxia | Europe, such as France, Germany, UK |
| G131V | 30s–40s | De novo | Tremor and apraxia | Europe |
| V176G | 61 years | Unknown | Ataxia in the cerebellum, personality changes, and rapid progressive dementia | Australia |
| H187R | 30s–50s | Familial | Classical GSS, cognitive decline, personality changes, ataxia, myoclonus, seizures, and dysarthria | USA, Europe |
| F198S | Can occur at young ages (under 30 years) | Familial | Cognitive decline, generalized cerebral dysfunction, and global dementia | USA (Indiana) |
| D202N | Variable, could happen in the 50s, but also in 70s | Familial and de novo | Atypical GSS, no spongioform changes (or mild spongioform changes), some patients were suspected to be AD PrP-positive amyloid and neurofibrillary tangles | USA, Canada, Europe |
| Q212P | Unknown | Unknown | GSS without spongioform changes | Italy |
| Q217R | 40s–50s | Familial | GSS, possible pathological overlap with FTD | Canada, Sweden |
| M232T | Unknown | Unknown | PrP-immunopositive kuru, multicentric plaques, diffuse PrP depositions | Poland |
Abbreviations: GSS, Gerstmann–Sträussler–Scheinker disease; CJD, Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease; FTD, frontotemporal dementia; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; DLB, dementia with Lewy bodies; PrP, prion protein.
Prion mutations associated with unique phenotypes
| Mutation | Age onset | Family history | Clinical phenotype | Regions where the mutation was reported |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S17G | 70 years | De novo | Diagnosed with AD, presented cognitive impairment with personality | China |
| P39L | 60–75 years | Familial and de novo | FTD, memory impairment, apathy, with speech impairment | Italy |
| G114V | Young onset | Familial | Disease started with neuropsychiatric symptoms pyramidal and extrapyramidal symptoms with dementia Sporadic CJD-like phenotype, with progressive dementia, lethargy, and sleeping problems | Uruguay, China |
| Y145-nonsense | Under 40 years of age | De novo | Initially diagnosed with AD, PrP-positive plaques also appeared (PrP cerebral amyloid angiopathy) | Japan |
| Q160-nonsense | Young onset | Mostly familial | AD-type pathology Neurofibrillary tangles and PrP-positive senile plaques | USA, Austria |
| Y163-nonsense | 40s–50s | Familial | Diagnosed with AD | USA |
| D187fs | Late 20s–40s | Familial | Cognitive decline and pan-autonomic-sensory neuropathy | Japan |
| T183A | 40s | Familial | Spongiform encephalopathy dementia with frontotemporal clinical features | Brazil, Germany |
| R208C | 80s | Unknown | Slow progressive dementia | China |
| Y226* | 54 years | Probably familial | Dementia, visual and acoustic hallucinations | The Netherlands |
| Q227* | 39 years | Probably familial | FTD with extrapyramidal signs | The Netherlands |
Abbreviations: CJD, Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease; FTD, frontotemporal dementia; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; DLB, dementia with Lewy bodies; PrP, prion protein.
Prion mutations with unclear pathogenicity or protective nature
| Name | Possible phenotype | Phenotypes and other remarks | Regions where the mutation was reported |
|---|---|---|---|
| G127S | Unknown | Found in a patient with schizophrenia and learning difficulties, but they might not be associated with the disease | Malaysia |
| G127V | Protective | Protective against kuru | Africa |
| M129V | Unknown | Disease-modifying factor (D178N) | All over the world |
| D167G | Risk factor/unknown | Might be involved in sporadic CJD | UK |
| D167N | Pathogenic/unknown | Patient had dementia with personality changes Mutation did not segregate with the disease | UK |
| N171S | Unknown | Mutation was found in a mesial temporal lobe epilepsy patient Mutation might not influence the cognitive performance of MTLE-HS patients | Europe |
| E219K | Unknown | Not risk factor/or protective factor for sCJD | All over the world |
| P238S | Possibly pathogenic | Disease phenotype unknown Might be pathogenic through the GPI-associated mechanisms | Germany |
Abbreviations: CJD, Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease; sCJD, sporadic CJD; vCJD, variant CJD; MTLE-HS, mesial temporal lobe epilepsy related to hippocampal sclerosis; GPI, glycosylphosphatidylinositol.
Figure 2Schematic representation of human PRNP gene with all known mutations and polymorphisms.