| Literature DB >> 31105631 |
Tao-Ran Li1,2, Qun Wang1, Mao-Mao Liu1, Rui-Juan Lv1.
Abstract
Leigh syndrome (LS) is a mitochondrial disease of infancy and early childhood, that is rarely seen in adults. The high degree of genetic and clinical heterogeneity makes LS a very complex syndrome. The clinical manifestations include neurological symptoms and various non-neurological symptoms, with different mutations differing in presentations and therapies. The m.10191T>C mutation in the mitochondrial DNA gene encoding in the respiratory chain complex I (CI) subunit of MTND3 results in the substitution of a highly conserved amino acid (p.Ser45Pro) within the ND3 protein, leading to CI dysfunction and causing a broad clinical spectrum of disorders that includes LS. Patients with the m.10191T>C mutation are rare in general, even more so in adults. In the present study, we report a family of patients with very rare adult-onset Leigh-like syndrome with the m.10191T>C mutation. The 24-year-old proband presented with seizures 6 years ago and developed refractory status epilepticus on admission. She had acute encephalopathy accompanied by lactic acidosis, symmetrical putamen and scattered cortical lesions. The video electroencephalogram suggested focal-onset seizures. She harbored the heteroplasmic m.10191T>C mutation in her blood and fibroblasts. Her aunt was diagnosed with mitochondrial disease at the age of 42, and had the heteroplasmic m.10191T>C mutation in her fibroblasts. Her aunt's son (cousin) died of respiratory failure at the age of 8, and we suspected he was also a case of LS. Furthermore, we reviewed the previously reported patients with the m.10191T>C mutation and summarized their characteristics. Recognizing the characteristics of these patients will help us improve the clinical understanding of LS or Leigh-like syndrome.Entities:
Keywords: Leigh syndrome; Leigh-like syndrome; MELAS; MELAS-LS overlap syndrome; m.10191T>C mutation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31105631 PMCID: PMC6499163 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.00347
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1The proband's brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) obtained at 18 years old. Axial T1/T2-weighted images [Panels (A) and (B), respectively] and contrast-enhancement T1-weighted image (C) of the brain were obtained when the proband appeared with the first seizures. An apparent large lesion was seen in the right putamen, and a relatively small lesion was seen in the left putamen.
Figure 2The proband's brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) obtained at 24 years old. Axial T2-weighted images of the brain MRI were obtained at the emergency department [Panels (A) and (B), respectively], 24 days after treatment, the brain MRI was redone [Panels (C) and (D), respectively]. Panels (A,B) showed frontal and parietal lobes cortical lesions and bilateral high-intensity areas in the putamen. Panels (C,D) showed that hyper signals in T2-weighted images of symmetrical putamen did not change significantly; however, the cortical lesions obviously improved.
Figure 3Mutation analysis and the family tree. (A) The proband had the heteroplasmic m.10191T>C mutation in blood and hair specimen, her aunt only had the heteroplasmic m.10191T>C mutation in her hair specimen; however, her parents had no detectable mutation. (B) The family tree showed two patients (the proband and her aunt) with the T10191C mutation.
Patients with the m.10191T>C mutation.
| 1. U/U | U/U | U | U | U | U | U | T10191C | U | ( |
| 2. M/U | 21 y/27 y | – | GTCS, focal motor EPC, myoclonic jerks, optic atrophy, sensory-motor deficit, cardiac arrest | Cerebral cortico-subcortical lesions | – | Morphologically normal; CI deficiency | 95% T10191C mutation | U | ( |
| 3. M/U | 24 y/alive at 42 y | Not Done | Migraine with aura, myoclonus, GTCS, ataxia, hypertonia, cognitive decline, optic atrophy, blind, downgaze, abnormal reflexes, SLEs | Midbrain, right superior colliculus, right lentiform nucleus | – | Increased range of fiber size, no RRF; no COX- negative fibers; CI deficiency | 77% T10191C mutation, M; 14%, B | Maternal | ( |
| 4. F/MEL AS-LS | <16 y/alive at 18 y | – | Cognitive decline, migraine, short stature, DR, EPC, tingle, GTCS, nystagmus, anopsia, ataxia, myoclonic jerks | Perirolandic and calcarine cortices | – | Morphologically normal; high citrate synthase; CI deficiency | 73% T10191C mutation, M; 19%, B | ( | |
| 5. F/MEL AS-LS | 11 y/alive at 19 y | + | Migraine with aura, myoclonus, GTCS, ataxia, ophthalmoplegia, dysarthria, SLEs, blurred vision, hearing loss, right-slanted tongue, right Babinski sign | Symmetrical basal ganglia and midbrain; bilateral parietal and occipital lobes | – | Morphologically normal; no RRF; no SSVs; no COX- negative fibers | T10191C | U | ( |
| 6. F/MEL AS-LS | 10 y/alive at 26 y | + | divergent strabismus, nystagmus, hearing loss, dysarthria, weakness, involuntary movement, facial spasm, GTCS, abnormal reflexes, hypertonia (Japanese Writing) | Symmetrical putamen and scattered cortices | – | No RRF | T10191C | U | ( |
| 7. F/MEL AS-LS | 16 y/U | + | Seizures, headache with flashing eyes, ataxia, SLEs, abnormal reflexes, hypertonia, right Babinski sign, hearing loss | Left frontal cortex, symmetrical red nucleus; right occipital lobe and left parietal lobe | – | Morphologically normal; no RRF | T10191C | U | ( |
| 8. F/MEL AS-LS | 5 y/alive at 12 y | + | Intermittent tremor, ataxia, myoclonic seizures, dysarthria, hearing loss, SLEs, cognitive decline, mental alteration, weakness, focal motor seizures | Symmetrical basal ganglia, multifocal cortices | – | No RRF; no COX deficiency; mitochondrion normal; CI deficiency | T10191C, M | U | ( |
| 9. U/LS | U | + | DR, cognitive decline and others (Not given specifically) | Biateral brainstem and/or basal nuclei (Not given specifically) | + | CI deficiency | 50% T10191C mutation, F and B; 90%, M | U (Maternal?) | ( |
| 10. M/LS | <1 y/U | + | DR, cognitive decline, ataxia, epilepsy, regression, SLEs, dystonia, progressive external ophthalmoplegia, optic atrophy, intrauterine growth failure | Leigh, stroke-like, thalamus lesions, white matter | U | Lipidosis; CI deficiency | T10191C | U | ( |
| 11. M/LS | 1–16 y/U | – | Dystonia, DR | Leigh, cerebellar atrophy | U | Morphologically normal; no RRF; CI deficiency | T10191C, T10010C | U | ( |
| 12. F/MEL AS-LS | 18 y/U | U | Cognitive decline, seizures, SLEs, ataxia, pyramidal syndrome, bulbar palsy | Bilateral basal ganglia and putamen; frontal, occipital, temporal, and parietal lobes; white matter | U | U | 55% T10191C mutation, B | U | ( |
| 13. F/MEL AS-LS | 16 y/U | U | Seizures, SLEs, ataxia, pyramidal syndrome, bulbar palsy | Bilateral midbrain, periaqueduct, super/infer colliculus, red nucleus, basal ganglia and putamen; frontal, occipital, and parietal lobes | U | U | 52% T10191C mutation, B | U | ( |
| 14. F/LS | 4–6 m/alive at 25 y | + | DR, cognitive decline, limited motility, upward gaze, dystonia, clonic seizures, GTCS | Bilateral basal ganglia, thalamus, midbrain, and periaqueductal gray matter; atrophy with ventricular dilation | – | fiber size variability; slight increase of perimysial connective tissue; no RRF; increased mitochondria; CI deficiency | 70% T10191C mutation, F | Maternal | ( |
| 15. M/LS | 6 y/alive at 16 y | + | Ptosis, weakness, motor regression, frequent falls, hypertonia, GTCS, thin, DR, cognitive decline, bilateral Babinski signs, abnormal reflexes | Symmetrical caudate nucleus and putamen | – | Mild lipid deposition; no RRF | T10191C mutation, B | U | ( |
| 16. F/LS | birth/U | + | Hypotonia, DR, myoclonic jerks, pyramidal syndrome, ophthalmoplegia | Symmetrical putamen | – | CI deficiency | 90% T10191C mutation, M | ( | |
| 17. M/LS | 26 m/alive at 12 y | + | Cognitive decline, DR, drowsiness, vomit, myoclonic jerks, hypotonia, hypothermia, bradypnea, bradycardia; no speech and wheelchair bounded at 12y | Bilateral putamen, bulbar nuclei and globi pallidi, severe cortico- subcortical atrophy | – | CI deficiency | 80% T10191C mutation, M | ( | |
| 18. M/LS | birth/23 d | Not Done | DR, lethargy, hypotonia, abnormal reflexes, decreased muscle mass, micrognathia, equinovarus, bradycardic, respiratory acidosis, seizures. Autopsy | Not done | – | morphologically normal; no RRF; normal ATPase staining | 100% T10191C mutation, F, K, S, L, and Br | ( | |
| 19. F/LS | 5 m/7 m | + | DR, dyspnea, hypotonia, dysphagia, fever, pneumorrhagia, coma | Bilateral cerebral hemisphere, basal ganglia, cerebellum, cerebellum, pons, and corpus callosum | – | Not Done | 100% T10191C mutation, B | U | ( |
| 20. M/LS | 5 w/U | – | DR, poor feeding, alertness, bradypnea, lethargy, hypotonia, clonus, abnormal reflexes, apnea, respiratory acidosis, lost all brainstem functions, seizures, spastic quadriplegia, decerebrate posture | Basal ganglia, midbrain, and pons | – | CI deficiency | 100% T10191C mutation, M and B; 50%, F | Maternal | ( |
| 21. M/LS | 6 y/alive at 16 y | + | Low birth weight, intrauterine embarrassment, apnea, DR, cognitive decline, epilepsy, hypertonia | Bilateral ganglia | – | Not Done; CI deficiency in blood | T10191C | U | ( |
| 22. M/LS | 4 m/alive at 4 y | U | Hypotonia, DR, seizures | Bilateral basal ganglia subacute necrotizing lesions on MRI | – | Morphologically normal; no RRF; CI deficiency | 68% T10191C mutation, M; 69%, B | ( | |
| 23. F/LS | birth/alive at 22 m | + | Hypotonia, dysphagia, weakness, DR, ataxia, exercise intolerance, vomit, ophthalmoplegia, respiratory distress, partial seizures, GTCS | Symmetrical thalamus, cerebral peduncles | – | CI deficiency | 97% T10191C mutation, M, F | Maternal | ( |
| 24. U/LS | 13 m/alive at 11 y 9 m | U | Seizures, DR, spasticity, involuntary movement, gastrointestinal symptoms | Ventriculomegaly, atrophy, frontal gray matter, bilateral putamen, thalamus, brainstem | U | U | T10191C | U | ( |
| 25. M/LS | 6 m/U | + | Macrocephaly, DR, ataxia, abnormal reflexes, spasticity, strabismus, seizures | Symmetrical putamen and head of caudate, right caudate body | – | CI deficiency | 74% T10191C mutation, M; 65%, F | ( | |
| 26. M/LS | birth/6 w | + | Poor feeding, lethargy, seizures, apnea, central hypotonia, peripheral hypertonia, weakness, abnormal reflexes, nonobstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy | Symmetrical brainstem extending to the lower medulla, basal ganglia, thalami, posterior limb of the internal capsule | – | CI deficiency | 87% T10191C mutation, M; 64%, F; 87%, L | ( | |
| 27. F/MEL AS-LS | 18 y/alive at 24 y | + | Seizures, GTCS, and others | Symmetrical putamen, bilateral frontal and parietal cortices | + | No RRF; mitochondrial electron density increased | T10191C, F, B | Maternal | Current study |
| 28. F/MEL AS-LS | 42 y/alive at 48 y | U | GTCS, dysarthria, focal motor seizures, SLEs, weakness | Multifocal cortices, right cerebellar hemisphere, left thalamus | + | Not Done | T10191C, F | Maternal | Current study |
U, unsure; COX, cytochrome c oxidase; EPC, epilepsia partialis continua; SLEs, stroke-like episodes; DR, developmental retardation; CI, Complex I; GTCS, generalized tonic-clonic seizure; RRF, ragged-red fibers; SSVs, strongly succinate dehydrogenase-stained vessels; M, muscle; B, blood; F, fibroblasts; K, kidney; S, spleen; L, liver; Br, brain.