| Literature DB >> 30820643 |
Neeti Vashi1,2, Monica J Justice3,4.
Abstract
Rare diseases are very difficult to study mechanistically and to develop therapies for because of the scarcity of patients. Here, the rare neuro-metabolic disorder Rett syndrome (RTT) is discussed as a prototype for precision medicine, demonstrating how mouse models have led to an understanding of the development of symptoms. RTT is caused by mutations in the X-linked gene methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (MECP2). Mecp2-mutant mice are being used in preclinical studies that target the MECP2 gene directly, or its downstream pathways. Importantly, this work may improve the health of RTT patients. Clinical presentation may vary widely among individuals based on their mutation, but also because of the degree of X chromosome inactivation and the presence of modifier genes. Because it is a complex disorder involving many organ systems, it is likely that recovery of RTT patients will involve a combination of treatments. Precision medicine is warranted to provide the best efficacy to individually treat RTT patients.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30820643 PMCID: PMC6606665 DOI: 10.1007/s00335-019-09793-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mamm Genome ISSN: 0938-8990 Impact factor: 2.957
Rett syndrome progresses over several stages
| Stage | Age | Symptoms |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Stagnation | 6–18 months | • Developmental delays (postural control, motor, language) • Reduced eye contact • Hand-wringing may occur • Microcephaly may occur |
| 2. Rapid regression | 1–4 years | • Loss of purposeful hand skills • Stereotypical hand movements (wringing, washing, tapping) • Loss of spoken language • Walking may be unsteady • Breathing irregularities may occur • Autistic-like features • Microcephaly progression • Seizures may occur |
| 3. Plateau/pseudo-stationary | 2–potentially life | • Hand apraxia/dyspraxia • Motor coordination difficulties and/or loss of motor skills • Improvement of communication skills may occur • Seizures are common |
| 4. Late motor deterioration | 10–life | • Severe physical disability • Muscle weakness, rigidity, or spasticity • Wheelchair dependency may occur |
Fig. 1Symptom severity in RTT is influenced by mutation status, XCI pattern, and modifier genes. a Of the 8 most common RTT-causing MECP2 mutations, R133C and R306C cause the least severe clinical presentation, whereas the missense mutations R106W and T158M, and nonsense mutations R168X, R255X, R270X, and R294X cause the most severe phenotype. Large deletions in the MECP2 gene also cause a severe phenotype, whereas smaller C-terminal truncations are less severe. b Differences in XCI skewing patterns can influence clinical presentation, where patients with fewer cells expressing the mutant MECP2 gene will have less severe symptoms. c Individuals who have modifier mutations in genes that suppress the RTT phenotype have a more favorable clinical presentation than individuals with mutations in genes that enhance detrimental symptoms
Many mouse models have been created to study Rett syndrome
| Allele type | Allele | Description | Male phenotype | References | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RB | BW | BR | AX | M | PD | Age of death (weeks) | ||||
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| Null | Exon 3–4 deletion | X | X^ | X | X | X | X | 6–12 | Guy et al. ( |
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| Null; some protein product retained | Exon 3 deletion | X | X* | X | X | X | X | 10 | Chen et al. ( |
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| Null | MBD deletion | X | X | NT | X | X | X | 8 | Pelka et al. ( |
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| R106W | Missense mutation | X | NT | NT | NT | NT | X | 10 | Unpublished; MGI submission |
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| Y120D | Missense mutation | X | X | NT | – | X | X | 14–17 | Gandaglia et al. ( |
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| R133C | Missense mutation | X | X | NT | X | X | X | 42 | Brown et al. ( |
|
| T158A | Missense mutation | X | – | NT | X | X | X | 16 | Goffin et al. ( |
|
| T158M | Missense mutation | X | X | NT | X | X | X | 13 | Lyst et al. ( |
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| T158M | Missense mutation | X | NT | NT | NT | NT | X | 14 | Unpublished; MGI submission |
|
| R168X | Stop mutation; truncation | X | X | X | X | X | X | 12–14 | Lawson-Yuen et al. ( |
|
| R255X | Stop mutation; truncation | X | X | X | X | X | X | 8–10 | Pitcher et al. |
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| R306C | Missense mutation | X | X | NT | X | X | X | 30 | Lyst et al. ( |
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| S80A | Missense mutation | NT | X* | NT | NT | X | NT | NT | Tao et al. ( |
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| A140V | Missense mutation | – | – | – | – | – | – | Normal lifespan | Jentarra et al. ( |
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| T308A | Missense mutation | X | NT | NT | NT | X | NT | > 16 | Ebert et al. ( |
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| R308X | Stop mutation; truncation | X | – | NT | X* | X | X | 6–12 | Shahbazian et al. ( |
|
| S421A | Missense mutation | – | – | – | – | – | – | Normal lifespan | Cohen et al. ( |
|
| Deletion | Isoform 2 deletion | – | – | – | – | – | – | Normal lifespan | Itoh et al. ( |
|
| Deletion | Isoform 1 deletion | X | – | NT | X | X | X | 7–31 | Yasui et al. ( |
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| – | Exons 3–4 floxed | X* | – | X | X | X | – | Normal lifespan | Guy et al. ( |
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| – | Exon 3 floxed | – | – | – | – | – | – | Normal lifespan | Chen et al. ( |
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| – | Floxed-stop upstream of exon 3 | X | X | X | X | X | X | 8–10 weeks | Guy et al. ( |
These mouse models include null alleles, point mutations designed to recapitulate mutations observed in human RTT patients, whole exon deletions, and conditional alleles used in combination with targeted Cre mice to achieve temporal deletion of Mecp2. In BW category, alleles marked with *which have an increased body weight, and alleles marked with ^show either increase or decrease depending on mouse background. In the AX category, alleles marked with *show increased anxiety
RB reduced brain size, BW body weight reduction, BR breathing abnormalities, AX reduced anxiety, MA motor abnormalities, PD premature death In categories, X present, – not present, NT not tested
Fig. 2RTT patients and Mecp2-mutant mouse models share many features
Fig. 3Treatment options in RTT either directly target MECP2 mutation or target pathways downstream of MECP2. Treatment options are further divided within these two groups
Preclinical treatments targeting pathways downstream of Mecp2
| Treatment | Mechanism | Mouse model | Prolong lifespan | Improved phenotype | References | Clinical trial |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Citalopram | Serotonin reuptake blocker |
| NT | Improved sensitivity to carbon dioxide exposure | Toward et al. ( | – |
| 8-OH-DPAT | Serotonin 1a agonist |
| NT | Reduced apneas | Abdala et al. ( | – |
| F15599 | Serotonin 1a agonist |
| NT | Reduced apneas and improves breathing irregularity | Levitt et al. ( | – |
| Sarizotan | Serotonin 1a agonist & dopamine D2-like receptor |
| NT | Reduced apneas and improved breathing irregularity | Abdala et al. ( | Y |
| LP-211 | Serotonin 7 receptor agonist |
| NT | Improved overall health, memory and anxiety | De Filippis et al. ( | – |
| Levodopa | Dopaminergic stimulation |
| Y | Improved motor activity | Szczesna et al. ( | – |
| Ketamine | NMDA receptor antagonist |
| NT | Improved startle response | Kron et al. ( | Y |
| Ketamine | NMDA receptor antagonist |
| Y | Improved limb clasping, motor coordination and reduced apneas | Patrizi et al. ( | Y |
| NO-711 | GABA reuptake blocker |
| NT | Reduced apneas | Abdala et al. ( | – |
| Benzodiazepine diazepam | GABA reuptake blocker |
| NT | Reduced apneas | Abdala et al. ( | – |
| L-838,417 | GABA reuptake blocker |
| NT | Reduced apneas | (Abdala et al. | – |
| Tiagabine | GABA reuptake blocker |
| Y | No improvement | El-Khoury et al. ( | – |
| THIP | GABA receptor agonist |
| Y | Improved motor function, social behavior, and reduced apneas | Zhong et al. ( | – |
| Mirtazapine | GABA release promoter |
| NT | Improved overall healthy, neuronal morphology, dendritic spine number, anxiety | Bittolo et al. ( | – |
| VUO462807 | mGlu5 positive allosteric modulator |
| N | Improved motor function and limb clasping | Gogliotti et al. ( | – |
| VU0422288 | mGlu7 positive allosteric modulator |
| NT | Reduced apneas, improves learning and memory | Gogliotti et al. ( | – |
| CTEP | mGluR5 negative allosteric modulator |
| Y | Reduced apneas, improved memory | Tao et al. ( | – |
| Acetyl-L-carnitine | Acetyl group donor |
| NT | Improved weight gain, motor activity and memory | Schaevitz et al. ( | – |
| Acetyl-L-carnitine | Acetyl group donor |
| NT | Improved weight gain, motor activity and memory | Schaevitz et al. ( | – |
| Choline | ACh |
| NT | Improved motor coordination and activity | Nag and Berger-Sweeney ( | – |
| Choline | ACh |
| NT | Improved motor activity | Ricceri et al. ( | – |
| Choline | ACh |
| NT | Improved motor coordination, anxiety and social behavior | Chin et al. ( | – |
| D-NAC | Dendrimer-conjugated N-acetyl cysteine |
| NT | Improved overall health, limb clasping | Nance et al. ( | – |
| Desipramine | Norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor |
| Y | Improved breathing irregularities | Roux et al. ( | Y |
| Desipramine | Norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor |
| Y | Reduced apneas | Zanella et al. ( | Y |
| Clenbuterol | B2-adrenergic receptor agonist |
| Y | Improved motor coordination and breathing irregularities | Mellios et al. ( | – |
| D-cycloserine | D-alanine analog |
| NT | No improvement | Na et al. ( | – |
|
| ||||||
| CX546 | Ampakine (BDNF) |
| NT | Improved breathing irregularity | Ogier et al. ( | – |
| Fingolimod | Sphingosine-1 phosphate receptor (BDNF) |
| NT | Improved motor activity | Deogracias et al. ( | Y |
| CPT157633 | PTP1B inhibitor (BDNF) |
| Y | Reduced limb clasping, partially improved motor activity | Krishnan et al. ( | – |
| LM22A-4 | TrkB agonist (BDNF) |
| NT | Improved breathing irregularity | Schmid et al. ( | – |
| 7,8-DHF | TrKB agonist (BDNF) |
| Y | Improved motor activity and breathing irregularities | Johnson et al. ( | – |
| LM22A-4 | TrkB agonist (BDNF) |
| NT | Reduced apneas | Kron et al. ( | – |
| LM22A-4 | TrkB agonist (BDNF) |
| NT | Improved memory | Li et al. ( | – |
| IGF-1 | IGF-1 |
| Y | Improves motor activity, breathing irregularities, increased brain size | Tropea et al. ( | Y |
| PEG-IGF-1 | Slow release IGF-1 |
| Y | No improvement | Pitcher et al. ( | – |
| RhIGF01 | Recombinant human IGF1-1 |
| Y | Improves motor activity, breathing irregularities, social behavior and anxiety | Castro et al. ( | Y |
|
| ||||||
| Diet restriction | Caloric deficit |
| NT | Improved motor activity and anxiety | Mantis et al. ( | – |
| Statins | Cholesterol-lowering medication |
| Y | Improved overall health, motor coordination, motor activity, serum lipids and liver lipids | Buchovecky et al. ( | Y |
| Dietary triheptanoin | Energy use (mitochondria) |
| Y | Improved motor coordination, social behavior, insulin sensitivity, metabolic homeostasis | Park et al. ( | Y |
| Trolox | Vitamin E derivative |
| NT | Blood glucose levels normalized, improved response to hypoxia | Janc et al. ( | – |
| Corticosterone | Glucocorticoid activation |
| Decreased lifespan | Worsened motor activity | Braun et al. ( | – |
| Corticosterone | Glucocorticoid activation |
| NT | Improved motor activity | De Filippis et al. ( | – |
| RU486 | Glucocorticoid repression |
| No | Delayed progression of symptoms, improved motor activity | Braun et al. ( | – |
| Curcumin | Anti-oxidant, anti-inflammatory |
| NT | NT | Panighini et al. ( | – |
| Insulin | Glucose signaling |
| Decreased lifespan | No improvement | Pitcher et al. ( | – |
|
| ||||||
| Zoledronic acid | Anti-osteoclastic |
| NT | Increased bone volume and connectivity | Shapiro et al. ( | – |
| Cannabidivarin | Phytocannabinoid |
| NT | Improved overall health, motor activity and social behavior | Vigli et al. ( | – |
| CNF1 | RhoGTPase |
| NT | Improved motor activity | De Filippis et al. ( | – |
| CNF1 | Rho GTPase |
| NT | Improved mitochondrial dysfunction and memory | De Filippis et al. ( | – |
|
| ||||||
| Enriched environment | Environmental modulation |
| NT | Improved motor coordination | Kondo et al. ( | – |
| Enriched environment | Environmental modulation |
| NT | Improved motor activity | Nag et al. ( | – |
| Enriched environment | Environmental modulation |
| N | Improved motor coordination and activity | Lonetti et al. ( | – |
| Enriched environment | Environmental modulation |
| NT | Reduced anxiety | Kondo et al. ( | – |
| Forniceal deep brain stimulation | Neural circuit stimulation |
| NT | Improved memory | Hao et al. ( | – |
| Bone marrow transplantation | Brain microglia repopulation |
| Y | Reduced apneas, improved breathing irregularities, improved locomotor activity | Derecki et al. ( | – |
Treatment strategies are divided into those influencing neurotransmitter signaling, growth factor signaling, metabolism, other pharmacological treatments, and non-pharmacological treatments. In prolong lifespan column, Y yes, N no, NT not tested. In clinical trial column, Y yes, –: not yet tested
Fig. 4Precision medicine for RTT. Different RTT patients will likely benefit from different combinations of treatment. When treating patients for RTT, their mutation status and XCI skewing should be taken into consideration. It is likely some patients will not be ideal candidates for gene therapy. Biomarkers, such as serum cholesterol, can be used to determine which patients will benefit from pharmacological intervention, such as statins. Management of other symptoms (seizures, scoliosis, lung infection, etc.) should also be considered. Together, RTT patients should receive individualized treatment to maximize their symptom improvement