| Literature DB >> 33986717 |
Aziza Miriam Belkheir1, Janine Reunert1, Christiane Elpers1, Lambert van den Heuvel2, Richard Rodenburg2, Anja Seelhöfer1, Stephan Rust1, Astrid Jeibmann3, Michael Frosch4, Thorsten Marquardt1.
Abstract
ßIV-spectrin is a protein of the spectrin family which is involved in the organization of the cytoskeleton structure and is found in high quantity in the axon initial segment and the nodes of Ranvier. Together with ankyrin G, ßIV-spectrin is responsible for the clustering of KCNQ2/3-potassium channels and NaV-sodium channels. Loss or reduction of ßIV-spectrin causes a destabilization of the cytoskeleton and an impairment in the generation of the action potential, which leads to neuronal degeneration. Furthermore, ßIV-spectrin has been described to play an important role in the maintenance of the neuronal polarity and of the diffusion barrier. ßIV-spectrin is also located in the heart where it takes an important part in the structural organization of ion channels and has also been described to participate in cell signaling pathways through binding of transcription factors. We describe two patients with a severe form of ßIV-spectrin deficiency. Whole-exome sequencing revealed the homozygous stop mutation c.6016C>T (p.R2006*) in the SPTBN4 gene. The phenotype of these patients is characterized by profound psychomotor developmental arrest, respiratory insufficiency and deafness. Additionally one of the patients presents with cardiomyopathy, optical nerve atrophy, and mitochondrial dysfunction. This is the first report of a severe form of ßIV-spectrin deficiency with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and mitochondrial dysfunction.Entities:
Keywords: cardiomyopathy; case report; mitochondrial dysfunction; neurodegeneration; psychomotor developmental arrest; ßIV-spectrin deficiency
Year: 2021 PMID: 33986717 PMCID: PMC8110827 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.643805
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Comparison of the major symptoms of patient I and patient II.
| • General muscular hypotonia | + | + |
| • Muscular atrophy | + | + |
| • Areflexia | + | + |
| • Sluggish sucking reflex | + | + |
| • Severe psychomotor developmental arrest | + | + |
| • Absent language development | + | + |
| • Brain MRI abnormalities | + | + |
| Visual and auditory symptoms | ||
| • Optical nerve atrophy | + | |
| • Deafness | + | |
| • Respiratory failure | + | + |
| • Recurrent pneumoniae | + | + |
| • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy of the non-obstructive type | + | |
| • Dysphagia induced malnutrition | + | + |
| • Reflux disease | + | + |
| • Gastrostomy tube/nasogastric tube | + | + |
| • Inactivity osteoporosis and bone fractures | + | |
| • Scoliosis/hyperlordosis/hypokyphosis | + | |
Figure 1Electron microscopy of the sural nerve of patient I. Electron microscopy showed neurodegenerative processes and inclusions in the Schwann cells of myelinated axons of the sural nerve (A–D). Some of these inclusions can be identified as myelin-like figures with concentric lamellar material and periodicity of about 10 nm (A). The inclusions are often mixed with glycogen-like granules (C). Membranous vacuolized and optically empty bodies, as well as isolated irregularly contoured electron-dense and sharply delimitable “tufa”-like inclusions (B,C). These inclusions lead to the suspicion of a lysosomal storage disease.
Results of the mitochondrial enzyme diagnostics.
| 1. [1-14C] pyruvate+ malate | 0.74 | 3.61–7.48 | nmolCO2/h.mUCS |
| 2. [1-14C] pyruvate + carnitine | 1.18 | 2.84–8.24 | nmolCO2/h.mUCS |
| 3. [U-14C] malate + pyruvate + malonate | 0.80 | 4.68–9.62 | nmolCO2/h.mUCS |
| 4. [U-14C] malate + acetylcarnitine + malonate | 1.15 | 3.43–9.62 | nmolCO2/h.mUCS |
| 5. [U-14C] malate + acetylcarnitine + arsenite | 0.93 | 2.05–3.85 | nmolCO2/h.mUCS |
| 6. [1,4-14C] succinate + acetlycarnitine | 0.70 | 2.54–6.39 | nmolCO2/h.mUCS |
| ATP + CrP production pyruvate | 7.6 | 42.1–81.2 | nmol/h.mUCS |
| Complex I | 20 | 70–251 | mU/UCS |
| Complex II | 291 | 335–749 | mU/UCS |
| Complex III | 1,523 | 2,200–6,610 | mU/UCS |
| Complex II + III (Succ.: cyt.c oxidoreductase; SCC) | 222 | 300–970 | mU/UCS |
| Complex IV | 825 | 810–3,120 | mU/UCS |
| Complex V (ATPase) | 345 | 169–482 | mU/UCOX |
| Citrate synthase | 37 | 37.4–162 | mU/mg |
Oxidation rates for .
Figure 2MRI Images. Cranial MRI of patient I at the age of 10 years. (A,B) Flair, (C) T1, (D) Flair, (E,F) T2. MRI shows severe atrophy of the cerebral cortex especially of the occipital cortex and a severe atrophy of the cerebellar hemispheres with a loss of the cerebellar vermis, a thin corpus callosum, and optical atrophy.
Figure 3Phenotype of patient I at the age of 15 years. (A) Severe global muscular hypotonia, scoliosis, talipes equinus. (B) Facial dysmorphias: Long drawn face with a high forehead, hypertelorism and exophtalmus, opened mouth, macroglossia, gingiva hyperplasia with teeth anomalies, small philtrum, and prominent eyebrows.
Figure 4Possible links between ßIV-spectrin deficiency and mitochondrial dysfunction. ßIV-spectrin deficiency leads to a destabilization of the cytoskeleton and thus to misclustering of ion channels, like NaV sodium and KCNQ potassium channels. The resulting neurodegenerative process could cause an altered calcium homeostasis (23). Increased calcium concentration enter the mitochondria via ruthenium red sensitive Ca2+ uniporter inducing the activation of calpain. Calpain induces impaired respiratory chain activity (23) and cell death (24, 25). Furthermore, increased calcium influx leads to opening of MPTP and thus swollen mitochondria and metabolic collapse of the mitochondria. Complex I produces ROS which leads to increasing calcium concentration and cell death. ROS are produced in complex I (22). Increasing oxidative stress leads to cell stress and to liberation of calcium from the ER. ROS could then induce mtDNA mutagenesis and neuronal cell death (20).