| Literature DB >> 34069211 |
Mona Sajeev1, Sharon Chin2, Gladys Ho3,4, Bruce Bennetts3,4, Bindu Parayil Sankaran1,5, Bea Gutierrez6, Beena Devanapalli6, Adviye Ayper Tolun4,6, Veronica Wiley4,7, Janice Fletcher2, Maria Fuller2,8, Shanti Balasubramaniam1,4.
Abstract
Maple syrup urine disease is caused by a deficiency of branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase, responsible for degradation of leucine, isoleucine, and valine. Biallelic pathogenic variants in BCKDHA, BCKDHB, or DBT genes result in enzyme deficiency. We report the case of a female infant who presented with mild gross motor delay at 4 months, and seizures with hypoglycaemia at 5 months. Newborn screening returned total leucine/isoleucine at the 99.5th centile of the population; however, as second-tier testing reported minimal alloisoleucine, the results were considered inconsistent with MSUD. Plasma amino acid and urine organic acid analyses at 5 months were, however, consistent with a diagnosis of MSUD. A brain MRI showed bilateral symmetrical T2 hyperintense signal abnormalities involving white matter, globus pallidus, thalamus, brainstem, and dentate nuclei with restricted diffusion. A repeat MRI 10 months post-dietary-intervention showed the resolution of these changes and progression in myelination. Her clinical phenotype, including protein tolerance, correlated with intermediate MSUD. Molecular analysis of all three genes identified two variants of uncertain significance, c.434-15_434-4del and c.365A>G (p. Tyr122Cys) in the DBT gene. The rate of leucine decarboxylation in fibroblasts was reduced, but not to the extent observed in classical MSUD patients, supporting an intermediate form of MSUD. Previously reported mRNA splicing studies supported a deleterious effect of the c.434-15_434-4del variant. This functional evidence and confirmation that the variants were in trans, permitted their reclassification as pathogenic and likely pathogenic, respectively, facilitating subsequent prenatal testing. This report highlights the challenges in identifying intermediate MSUD by newborn screening, reinforcing the importance of functional studies to confirm variant pathogenicity in this era of molecular diagnostics.Entities:
Keywords: DBT gene; VOUS; intermediate MSUD; leucine decarboxylation studies; validation of pathogenicity
Year: 2021 PMID: 34069211 PMCID: PMC8162326 DOI: 10.3390/ijns7020025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Neonatal Screen ISSN: 2409-515X
Figure 1MRI of the brain at 7 months. The red arrows show the hyperintense signal changes. T2-weighted axial images of an MRI scan of the brain at 7 months of age (A–C) show hyperintense signal changes in the white matter (A), globus pallidus (B), and thalamus (B); pons, cerebellar peduncle, and dentate nucleus (C arrows). The corresponding areas show restricted diffusion in DWI Images (D–F) and ADC maps (G–I).
Leucine decarboxylation study results.
| Cultured Skin Fibroblast Sample | 14CO2 Released/hour/µg Protein | |
|---|---|---|
| [1-14C] Leucine | [1-14C] Ornithine | |
| Proband | 2.1 | 31 |
| Mother | 28 | 14 |
| Father | 22 | 16 |
| Normal controls | 31, 50 | 23 |
| MSUD affected | 0.29 | 24 |
Figure 2MRI of the brain 10 months later. The red arrow indicates the prominent perivascular spaces. From a follow-up MRI brain scan 10 months later, the T2-weighted axial images show significant improvement in myelination. Prominent perivascular spaces are also seen (A-arrow). There is resolution of the previously noted signal changes of basal ganglia and thalamus (B), and the brainstem and dentate nuclei (C).