| Literature DB >> 36003149 |
Joseph C Nowacki1, Ashley M Fields1, Meng Meng Fu1.
Abstract
Leukodystrophies are a broad spectrum of neurological disorders that are characterized primarily by deficiencies in myelin formation. Clinical manifestations of leukodystrophies usually appear during childhood and common symptoms include lack of motor coordination, difficulty with or loss of ambulation, issues with vision and/or hearing, cognitive decline, regression in speech skills, and even seizures. Many cases of leukodystrophy can be attributed to genetic mutations, but they have diverse inheritance patterns (e.g., autosomal recessive, autosomal dominant, or X-linked) and some arise from de novo mutations. In this review, we provide an updated overview of 35 types of leukodystrophies and focus on cellular mechanisms that may underlie these disorders. We find common themes in specialized functions in oligodendrocytes, which are specialized producers of membranes and myelin lipids. These mechanisms include myelin protein defects, lipid processing and peroxisome dysfunction, transcriptional and translational dysregulation, disruptions in cytoskeletal organization, and cell junction defects. In addition, non-cell-autonomous factors in astrocytes and microglia, such as autoimmune reactivity, and intercellular communication, may also play a role in leukodystrophy onset. We hope that highlighting these themes in cellular dysfunction in leukodystrophies may yield conceptual insights on future therapeutic approaches.Entities:
Keywords: astrocyte; leukodystrophy; microglia, glia; myelin; oligodendrocyte; white matter (WM)
Year: 2022 PMID: 36003149 PMCID: PMC9393611 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2022.902261
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Diverse mechanisms and cell types contribute to hypomyelination in leukodystrophies. In oligodendrocytes, mutations in myelin structural proteins (CNP, PLP1) can lead to thinner myelin sheaths and paranodal loop malformation (CNTNAP1, MAG, MAL). PLP mutations can also lead to aberrant protein aggregation. Other mutations can affect the function of organelles that participate in lipid metabolism and catabolism, such as peroxisomes (ABCD1, HSD17B4, PEX family genes) and lysosomes (ARSA, FUCA1, GALC, GLA, GLB1, PSAP). These defects can also lead to toxic lipid accumulation that builds up in the bloodstream (GLA) or activate astrocytes and microglia (ARSA). Finally, mutations affecting transcription factors (NKX6-2, SOX10), transcriptional machinery (POLR3 genes) and translation machinery (DARS1, eIF2B genes, EPRS1, RARS1) cause impair differentiation of oligodendrocytes and reduce production of myelin proteins. Defects in microtubules that project toward and within the myelin sheath (TUBB4A) as well as in PI4K signaling pathways that contribute to wrapping (FAM126A) can affect myelin sheath growth. Mutations in mitochondrial genes can lead to lipid processing defects (CYP27A1), aberrant activation of apoptotic pathways (AIFM1), and metabolic issues (D2HGDH, IHD2, L2HGDH, SLC25A1). Other pathways, such as nuclear envelope integrity (LB1) and zinc efflux (TMEM163) can also affect oligodendrocyte health. In astrocytes, intermediate filament protein mutations (GFAP) can lead to its aggregation and formation of Rosenthal fibers. Mutations affecting gap junctions can disrupt cell junctions between astrocytes and oligodendrocytes (GJA1, GJC2) and between astrocytes and vasculature (HEPACAM/GLIALCAM, MLC1). Mutations affecting nucleic-acid sensors (ADAR1, IFIH1, RNASEH2 genes, SAMHD1, TREX1) can activate an immune response and release of interferons from astrocytes. In microglia, mutations in cytokine receptors (CSF1R) can affect microglial proliferation, differentiation, and activation. Finally, mutations affecting lipid processing (ARSA, D2HGDH, IHD2, L2HGDH, SLC25A1) can lead to aberrant lipid accumulation, which can activate microglia and astrocytes.
Leukodystrophy-causing mutations and their cellular mechanisms.
| Disease type | Name | Gene(s) | Cell type | Cellular mechanism | Inheritance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Fabry Disease (FD) |
| Unknown | Lysosomal enzyme α-galactosidase A (GLA) metabolizes globotriaosylceramide. Mutant α-galactosidase cannot break down glycolipids leading to accumulation in tissues. | X-linked Recessive, but female carriers can be affected |
| Fucosidosis |
| Oligodendrocytes | Lysosomal α- | Autosomal Recessive | |
| GM1 Gangliosidosis |
| Oligodendrocytes | Lysosomal enzyme β-galactosidase (GLB1) degrades glycosphingolipids into sphingosine, which is used in myelin synthesis. Mutant β-galactosidase cannot break down GM1 ganglioside, which accumulates in tissues and the brain. | Autosomal Recessive | |
| Krabbe Disease; Globoid-Cell Leukodystrophy (GCL) |
| Oligodendrocytes Macrophages | Lysosomal enzyme galactosylceramidase (GALC) catabolizes galactosylceramide and galactosylsphingosine (psychosine) during normal myelin turnover. Mutant GALC cannot catabolize sphingolipids, leading to accumulation and oligodendrocyte cell death. Lipid accumulation attracts macrophages, which form multinucleated globoid cells. | Autosomal Recessive | |
| Metachromatic Leukodystrophy (MLD) |
| Oligodendrocytes, Microglia, Macrophages | Lysosomal arylsulfatase A (ARSA) metabolizes sulfatides, which are abundant in myelin. Mutant ARSA cannot metabolize sulfatides, which accumulate and activate microglia and macrophages, leading to apoptosis and demyelination. | Autosomal Recessive | |
|
| D-Bifunctional Protein (DBP) Deficiency |
| Neurons; Oligodendrocytes | DBP catalyzes β-oxidation of fatty acids. DBP deficiency in animal models leads to lipid accumulation, brain atrophy, and hypomyelination. | Autosomal Recessive |
| X-linked Adreno-leukodystrophy (X-ALD) |
| Neurons, Astrocytes, Oligodendrocytes |
| X-linked recessive | |
| Zellweger Syndrome Spectrum Disorders (ZSDs) |
| Oligodendrocytes |
| Autosomal Recessive | |
|
| Cerebrotendinous Xanthomatosis (CTX) |
| Microglia, Oligodendrocytes | Sterol-27 hydroxylase breaks down cholesterol into a bile acid. Sterol-27 hydroxylase deficiency leads to cholesterol-derivative accumulation. | Autosomal Recessive |
| Hypomyelination with Spondylometa physeal Dysplasia (H-SMD) |
| Unknown | Mitochondrial apoptosis-inducing factor 1 (AIFM1) stabilizes complexes I and III through its redox activity. Mutant AIFM1 may not perform its electron-transport chain functions. | X-linked recessive | |
| 2-Hydroxyglutaric Aciduria (2HGA) |
| Neurons, Astrocytes | Mitochondrial enzymes break down | Autosomal Recessive; Autosomal Dominant (Type II | |
| Canavan Disease |
| Oligodendrocytes | Aspartoacylase (ASPA) catabolizes N-acetyl- | Autosomal Recessive | |
|
| Alexander Disease (AxD) |
| Astrocytes | Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) is an astrocyte-specific intermediate filament protein. GFAP overexpression leads to aggregation (Rosenthal fibers) and cell toxicity. | Autosomal Dominant; |
| Autosomal Dominant Leukodystrophy with Autonomic Disease (ADLD) |
| Oligodendrocytes | Lamin B1 is an intermediate filament that builds the nuclear lamina. Gene duplication of | Autosomal Dominant | |
| Hypomyelination with Atrophy of the Basal Ganglia and Cerebellum (H-ABC) |
| Oligodendrocytes, Neurons |
| Autosomal Dominant | |
|
| 4H Leukodystrophy; POLR3-related Leukodystrophy |
| Oligodendrocytes | RNA polymerase III (POLR3) transcribes DNA into RNA. Mutations affect assembly of the RNA polymerase III complex and its DNA binding properties, thus reducing transcription of rRNA and tRNA. | Autosomal Recessive |
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| Oligodendrocytes | NKX6-2 is a transcription factor involved in oligodendrocyte differentiation and myelination. |
| |
| Waardenburg–Hirschsprung disease (WS4) |
| Oligodendrocytes, Schwann cells | SOX10 is a transcription factor involved in oligodendrocyte differentiation and myelination. |
| |
|
| tRNA Synthetase-related Leukodystrophies |
| Oligodendrocytes, Neurons | Mutations affecting proteins in the tRNA synthetase complex may disrupt protein translation | Autosomal Recessive |
| Vanishing White Matter (VWM) Disease; Childhood Ataxia and Cerebral Hypomyelination (CACH) |
| Oligodendrocytes | Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2B (EIF2B) initiates mRNA translation and is a GTPase. Mutations impair translational control, thus reducing OPC differentiation and myelin production. | Autosomal Recessive | |
|
| Megalencephalic Leukoencephalopathy with Subcortical Cysts (MLC); van der Knaap Disease |
| Astrocytes, Oligodendrocytes | MLC1 and HEPACAM (GLIALCAM) contribute to astrocytic osmoregulation. Mutations can lead to gliovascular coupling defects, causing fluid buildup and macrocephaly. | Autosomal Recessive |
| Oculodentodigital Dysplasia (ODDD) |
| Astrocytes, Oligodendrocytes | Gap junction α1/Connexin 43 create astrocyte gap junctions. Mutations disrupt gap junction formation and function between astrocytes and oligodendrocytes. | Autosomal Dominant; Autosomal Recessive; | |
| Pelizaeus-Merzbacher-like Disease (PMLD) |
| Astrocytes; Oligodendrocytes | Mutations in connexin 47 disrupt gap junction function and electrical coupling. | Autosomal Recessive | |
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| Oligodendrocytes | Mutant 2′,3′-cyclic nucleotide-3′-phosphodiesterase (CNP) protein is expressed at very low levels. | Autosomal Recessive |
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| Neurons, Oligodendrocytes |
| Autosomal Recessive | |
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| Oligodendrocytes | Mutant myelin-associated glycoprotein (MAG) is retained in the ER, resulting in misshapen paranodes and thin myelin sheaths. | Autosomal Dominant | |
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| Oligodendrocytes | Myelin and lymphocyte (MAL) protein is important for the structure of paranodal loops. Mutant MAL accumulates in the ER, indicative of protein misfolding. |
| |
| Pelizaeus–Merzbacher Disease (PMD) |
| Oligodendrocytes | PLP is the most abundant protein in myelin and important for compaction. Mutant PLP protein can misfold and aggregate. Disruption of iron metabolism may occur. | X-linked | |
|
| Hypomyelination with Congenital Cataracts (HCC) |
| Oligodendrocytes |
| Autosomal Recessive |
|
|
| Unknown | SLC35B2 is a PAPS transporter that is important for making sulfated proteoglycans. Mutant SLC35B2 loses its localization to Golgi. | Autosomal Recessive | |
| Transient Infantile Hypomyelinating Leukodystrophy-19 (HLD19) |
| Oligodendrocytes | TMEM63A is a mechanosensitive ion channel. Mutant TMEM63A does not produce stretch-activated currents in response to mechanical stimulation. | Autosomal | |
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| Oligodendrocytes, Neurons | TMEM106B is involved in lysosomal trafficking and acidification. Mutant TMEM106B disrupts these lysosomal functions and may reduce PLP trafficking. |
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| Oligodendrocytes | TMEM163 is a zinc efflux transporter. In cultured cells, mutant TMEM163 is hyperactive in zinc efflux. |
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| Aicardi-Goutieres Syndrome (AGS) |
| Astrocytes, Oligodendrocytes | These genes encode the intracellular nucleic acid sensor machinery that induces astrocyte release of interferons and subsequent cell death when foreign or defective genetic material is detected. | Autosomal Recessive |
| Hereditary Diffuse Leukoencephalo pathy with Spheroids (HDLS) |
| Microglia; Oligodendrocytes; Neurons | Mutant CSF1 receptor is defective in activating following CSF1 ligand binding, leading to defects in microglia function and demyelination. | Autosomal Dominant |