| Literature DB >> 33005626 |
Abstract
The brain is the physical organ of the mind but efforts to understand mental illness within a neurobiological context have hitherto been unavailing. Mental disorders (anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia) affect about one fifth of the population and present an almost endless societal challenge at the frontier of human sciences. Prodigious technological advances in functional neuroimaging and large-scale genetics have not yet delivered the prospect of refined molecular understanding of mental illness beyond early anatomical descriptions of brain metabolism. However, intensive clinical phenotyping and quantitative metabolic studies using sophisticated radio-ligands in positron-emission tomography, persistently favor the neurobiological approach. This Perspective pursues a familiar maxim in Medicine, aptly summarized in the words of Arthur Koestler: "Nature is generous in her senseless experiments on mankind." Hitherto, studies in neuropsychiatry have largely ignored rare genetic disorders but derangements of specific components within the cerebral laboratory offer rich opportunities for mechanistic exploration. Aberrant psychic behavior is characteristic of many inborn errors of metabolism and although each disorder represents a universe of its own, we are at a threshold for understanding, since contemporary genetics and cell biology furnish abundant materials to take on the perturbing enigma of mental derangement. A further development relates to orphan drugs with actions on defined molecular targets: these represent new ways to study the pathogenesis of psychiatric phenomena associated with rare diseases and in a manner not formerly possible. Here we introduce the frontier of schizophrenia and its strong association with late-onset Tay-Sachs disease as a paradigm to explore.Entities:
Keywords: GM2 gangliosidoses; Thudichum; late-onset Tay-Sachs disease; lysosomal diseases; psychiatric manifestations; schizophrenia; sphingolipids; substrate-reduction therapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 33005626 PMCID: PMC7479189 DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2020.00177
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Biosci ISSN: 2296-889X
Inborn errors of metabolism with psychiatric features.
| Disease group | OMIM No. | Psychiatric manifestations |
| Wilson disease | 277900 | Labile and irritable, antisocial behavior, wide-ranging, obsessive-compulsiveness, psychosis |
| Cobalamin deficiency (CblC, or G) | 277400 | Disturbed behavior, visual hallucinations |
| Folate deficiency (e.g., of methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase) | 236250 | As above but catatonia reported |
| Lesch-Nyhan syndrome | 300322 | Dementia, aggression, self-mutilation |
| Porphyria (e.g., acute intermittent) | 176000 | Delusion, anxiety, mania, psychosis |
| Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (other genetic hyperammonaemias) | 311250 | Episodic alienation, catatonia, delusions, psychotic outbursts; protein aversion |
| Succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency | 234500 | Attention deficit, hyperactivity, sleep disturbance, obsessive-compulsions and autism |
| Monoamine oxidase deficiency | 309850 | Dementia, violence and (sexual) deviancy |
| Non-ketotic hyperglycinaemia | 605899 | Coma, agitation, behavioral difficulties |
| Cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis | 213700 | Mood changes, hallucinations |
| Adenoleukodsytrophy | 300100 | Attention deficit and disturbed behavior, fronto-temporal dementia mimics psychosis |
| Sanfilippo disease subtypes A, B, C and D Mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS type 3 A–D) | 252900, 252920, 252930 and 252940 | Hyperactivity, cognitive decline and aggression Delayed systemic or skeletal MPS features |
| Hunter disease (MPS type 2) | 309900 | Cognitive decline, hyperactivity and aggression |
| Alpha-mannosidosis and β-mannosidosis | 248500,248510 | Confusion, hallucinations and psychotic episodes |
| Niemann-Pick disease type C1 & C2 | 257220,607625 | Behavioral changes, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder in juveniles; autistic and psychotic behavior in adults |
| Anderson-Fabry disease | 301500 | Depression, mild cognitive impairment |
| Metachromatic leukodystrophy | 250100 | Attention deficit and disturbed behavior, fronto-temporal dementia mimics psychosis |
| GM2 gangliosidosis (Tay-Sachs and Sandhoff diseases) | 272800 268800 | Depression, delusions, hallucinations, ideas of reference–schizophrenia may antedate neurological in ~50% adults |
FIGURE 1Cranial imaging in a 5 year-old child with infantile-onset GM2 gangliosidosis. Magnetic resonance images (left to right: sagittal T1w; coronal T2w; axial T2w FLAIR). Note the cerebral cortical and cerebellar atrophy with wide sulci and shrunken gyri; there are symmetrical diffuse white matter changes with reduced T1w intensity and hyper-intense signals in T2w images – the latter indicating demyelination. Abnormal signal intensity is seen in basal ganglia, peducles, and brain stem. Female infant born after normal delivery to unrelated white British parents without Ashkenazi ancestry; hypotonia noted at 7 months with cherry-red spots observed. Tay-Sachs disease confirmed enzymatically and by molecular analysis of the HEXA gene (well-known “severe” mutation frequent in British “Celtic” patients was identified). With scrupulous care and potentially salutary effects of a substrate-reducing agent (miglustat), the illness followed an unexpectedly protracted course. Nonetheless, characteristic startle responses to sounds, loss of motor skills, epilepsy and episodes of aspiration pneumonia led to deterioration with a peaceful death, aged 8 years.
FIGURE 2Neuropathological findings in a 3 year-old patient with GM2 gangliosidosis. Light microscopic images of brain sections from a non-Jewish British infant with biochemically confirmed classical infantile-onset Tay-Sachs disease showing, left to right, views of cerebellum (upper panels) and cerebrum, cingulate lobe, (lower panels) with increasing magnification revealing structural neuronal disease and cell loss as indicated with “ghosts.” Extreme right hand panels show ultrastructural features including florid lysosomal GM2 ganglioside storage pathology in a cerebellar Purkyně cell at different magnifications (bars indicate, respectively 2 μm and 500 nm). Macrocephaly with astrogliosis was present with striking cerebellar atrophy (total brain mass 1384 g, cerebellum and brain stem 113 g). Note special stains indicate the neuronal loss and disease in cerebellum and cerebral cortex associated with demyelination and axonal loss in subcortical white matter. (Courtesy Dr. Andrew Deane, Department of Pathology, Cambridge University Hospitals).