Dejerine-Sottas综合征致病机制的研究进展
PMP22基因突变与蛋白转运及剂量效应研究
该组文献聚焦于PMP22基因的不同突变形式(点突变、重复、缺失及嵌合)如何通过剂量效应或增益性功能缺失影响蛋白在细胞内的加工与转运。重点探讨了蛋白堆积在内质网或高尔基体中、对胆固醇代谢的调节干扰以及导致髓鞘发育不良的分子基础。
- Post-transcriptional microRNA repression of PMP22 dose in severe Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1(M. Pipis, Seongsik Won, R. Poh, S. Efthymiou, J. Polke, M. Skorupinska, J. Blake, A. Rossor, John J. Moran, P. Munot, Francesco Muntoni, M. Laurá, J. Svaren, M. Reilly, 2023, Brain)
- Dejerine-Sottas disease with de novo dominant point mutation of the PMP22 gene.(V V Ionasescu, R Ionasescu, C Searby, R Neahring, 1995, Neurology)
- Exposure at the cell surface is required for gas3/PMP22 To regulate both cell death and cell spreading: implication for the Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1A and Dejerine-Sottas diseases.(Claudio Brancolini, Paolo Edomi, Stefania Marzinotto, C. Schneider, 2000, Molecular Biology of the Cell)
- Widespread expression of the peripheral myelin protein‐22 gene (pmp22) in neural and non‐neural tissues during murine development(D. Baechner, T. Liehr, H. Hameister, H. Altenberger, H. Grehl, U. Suter, B. Rautenstrauss, 1995, Journal of Neuroscience Research)
- Dejerine-Sottas neuropathy in mother and son with same point mutation of PMP22 gene.(V V Ionasescu, C C Searby, R Ionasescu, S Chatkupt, N Patel, R Koenigsberger, 1997, Muscle & nerve)
- Subcellular diversion of cholesterol by gain‐ and loss‐of‐function mutations in PMP22(Ye Zhou, D. Borchelt, Jodi C Bauson, S. Fazio, Joshua R. Miles, H. Tavori, L. Notterpek, 2020, Glia)
- Overloaded Endoplasmic Reticulum–Golgi Compartments, a Possible Pathomechanism of Peripheral Neuropathies Caused by Mutations of the Peripheral Myelin Protein PMP22(D. D'urso, R. Prior, Regine Greiner‐Petter, A. Gabreëls-Festen, H. Müller, 1998, The Journal of Neuroscience)
- Structural and Functional Abnormalities of the Neuromuscular Junction in the Trembler-J Homozygote Mouse Model of Congenital Hypomyelinating Neuropathy.(Alexandra N Scurry, Dante J Heredia, Cheng-Yuan Feng, Gregory B Gephart, Grant W Hennig, Thomas W Gould, 2016, Journal of neuropathology and experimental neurology)
- A de novo duplication in 17p11.2 and a novel mutation in the Po gene in two Déjérine—Sottas syndrome patients(K. Silander, P. Meretoja, E. Nelis, V. Timmerman, C. Broeckhoven, P. Aula, M. Savontaus, 1996, Human Mutation)
- PMP22 related congenital hypomyelination neuropathy(G. Fabrizi, A. Simonati, F. Taioli, Tiziana Cavallaro, M. Ferrarini, F. Rigatelli, A. Pini, M. Mostacciuolo, N. Rizzuto, 2001, Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry)
- Identification of a new Pmp22 mouse mutant and trafficking analysis of a Pmp22 allelic series suggesting that protein aggregates may be protective in Pmp22-associated peripheral neuropathy.(A. Isaacs, A. Jeans, P. Oliver, L. Vizor, Steve D. M. Brown, A. Hunter, K. Davies, 2002, Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience)
- PMP22 carrying the trembler or trembler-J mutation is intracellularly retained in myelinating Schwann cells.(J. Colby, R. Nicholson, K. Dickson, W. Orfali, R. Naef, U. Suter, G. Snipes, 2000, Neurobiology of Disease)
- An in-frame deletion in peripheral myelin protein-22 gene causes hypomyelination and cell death of the Schwann cells in the new Trembler mutant mice.(J. Suh, N. Ichihara, K. Saigoh, O. Nakabayashi, T. Yamanishi, K. Tanaka, K. Wada, T. Kikuchi, 1997, Neuroscience)
- Compound heterozygous deletions of PMP22 causing severe Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth disease of the Dejerine‐Sottas disease phenotype(K. Al-Thihli, T. Rudkin, N. Carson, C. Poulin, S. Melançon, V. D. Der Kaloustian, 2008, American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A)
- The modifying effect a PMP22 deletion in a family with Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1 neuropathy due to an EGR2 mutation.(Viktória Reményi, G. Inczédy-Farkas, A. Gál, B. Bereznai, Z. Pál, Veronica Karcagi, F. Mechler, M. Molnár, 2014, Ideggyógyászati Szemle)
- Mutation-dependent alteration in cellular distribution of peripheral myelin protein 22 in nerve biopsies from Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1A.(C O Hanemann, D D'Urso, A A Gabreëls-Festen, H W Müller, 2000, Brain : a journal of neurology)
- Dejerine–Sottas’ neuropathy caused by the missense mutation PMP22 Ser72Leu(Wilson Marques, J. Neto, A. A. Barreira, 2004, Acta Neurologica Scandinavica)
- De novo Ser72Leu mutation in the peripheral myelin protein 22 in two Polish patients with a severe form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease.(A. Kochański, D. Kabzińska, 2004, Acta Biochimica Polonica)
- Phe 84 deletion of the PMP22 gene associated with hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy HMSN III with multiple cranial neuropathy: clinical, neurophysiological and magnetic resonance imaging findings(G. Yener, A. Guiochon‐Mantel, F. Obuz, B. Baklan, V. Öztürk, I. Kovanlikaya, R. Çakmur, A. Genç, 2001, Journal of Neurology)
- A patient with PMP22-related hereditary neuropathy and DBH-gene-related dysautonomia(A. Bartoletti-Stella, G. Chiaro, G. Calandra-Buonaura, M. Contin, C. Scaglione, G. Barletta, A. Cecere, P. Garagnani, P. Tieri, A. Ferrarini, S. Piras, C. Franceschi, M. Delledonne, P. Cortelli, S. Capellari, 2015, Journal of Neurology)
- Detection and processing of peripheral myelin protein PMP22 in cultured Schwann cells.(S. Pareek, U. Suter, G. Snipes, A. Welcher, E. Shooter, R. A. Murphy, 1993, Journal of Biological Chemistry)
- Trembler mouse carries a point mutation in a myelin gene(U. Suter, AndrewA. Welcher, T. Özçelik, G. Snipes, B. Kosaras, U. Francke, S. Billings-Gagliardi, R. Sidman, E. Shooter, 1992, Nature)
- Molecular alterations resulting from frameshift mutations in peripheral myelin protein 22: Implications for neuropathy severity(J. Johnson, Kyle J. Roux, Brad S. Fletcher, J. Fortun, L. Notterpek, L. Notterpek, 2005, Journal of Neuroscience Research)
- Clinical and Molecular Characterization of PMP22 point mutations in Taiwanese patients with Inherited Neuropathy(Y. Liao, P. Tsai, Thy-Sheng Lin, C. Hsiao, N. Chao, Kon-Ping Lin, Yi-Chung Lee, 2017, Scientific Reports)
- A Case of Severe Early-Onset Neuropathy Caused by a Compound Heterozygous Deletion of the PMP22 Gene: Clinical and Neurographic Aspects(S. D'Arrigo, V. Tessarollo, F. Taroni, S. Baratta, C. Pantaleoni, E. Schiaffi, C. Ciano, 2019, Neuropediatrics)
- Human nerve pathology caused by different mutational mechanisms of the PMP22 gene.(A Gabreëls-Festen, R V Wetering, 1999, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences)
- Déjérine‐Sottas neuropathy is associated with a de novo PMP22 mutation(L. Valentijn, R. Ouvrier, Norbert H. A. Van Den Bosch, P. Bolhuis, F. Baas, G. Nicholson, 1995, Human Mutation)
- Dejerine‐sottas neuropathy and PMP22 point mutations: A new base pair substitution and a possible “hot spot” on Ser72(Jr MD Wilson Marques, MD DSc P. K. Thomas, BSc Mary G. Sweeney, MD Lucinda Carr, MD Nicholas W. Wood, P. Thomas, M. Sweeney, Daniel Wood, 1998, Annals of Neurology)
- The peripheral myelin protein 22 and epithelial membrane protein family.(A M Jetten, U Suter, 2000, Progress in nucleic acid research and molecular biology)
- Many facets of the peripheral myelin protein PMP22 in myelination and disease(R. Naef, U. Suter, 1998, Microscopy Research and Technique)
- Correlation between varying levels of PMP22 expression and the degree of demyelination and reduction in nerve conduction velocity in transgenic mice.(C. Huxley, E. Passage, A. Robertson, B. Youl, S. Huston, A. Manson, D. Sabéran-Djoniedi, D. Figarella-Branger, J. Pellissier, P. Thomas, M. Fontès, 1998, Human Molecular Genetics)
- Biopsy in a patient with PMP22 exon 2 mutation recapitulates pathology of Trembler-J mouse.(R. Madrid, A. Lofgren, J. Baets, V. Timmerman, 2013, Neuromuscular Disorders)
- Dejerine–Sottas syndrome associated with point mutation in the peripheral myelin protein 22 (PMP22) gene(B. Roa, P. Dyck, H. Marks, P. Chance, J. Lupski, 1993, Nature Genetics)
- Vincristine exacerbates asymptomatic Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease with a novel EGR2 mutation(Tomonori Nakamura, A. Hashiguchi, Shinsuke Suzuki, K. Uozumi, Shoko Tokunaga, H. Takashima, 2012, neurogenetics)
- A somatic and germline mosaic mutation in MPZ/P0 mimics recessive inheritance of CMT1B(G. Fabrizi, M. Ferrarini, Tiziana Cavallaro, L. Jarre, A. Polo, N. Rizzuto, 2001, Neurology)
MPZ (P0) 蛋白结构功能异常与膜粘附缺陷
此类文献通过分子建模和生化分析,研究MPZ蛋白胞外Ig样结构域的突变如何破坏同源二聚化、影响胞内段与膜的结合,进而导致髓鞘紧密化受损。突出的研究点在于MPZ与PMP22的相互作用及其在维持髓鞘结构稳定中的作用。
- Multiple de novo MPZ (P0) point mutations in a sporadic Dejerine‐Sottas case(L. E. Warner, M. Shohat, Z. Shorer, J. Lupski, 1997, Human Mutation)
- Novel Dominant Splicing Variant in MPZ Associated With Unusual Charcot–Marie–Tooth Disease(Anthony Maino, Florence Hazane-Puch, Philippe Petiot, Natalie Roux-Buisson, J. Rendu, Julien Fauré, Gaëlle Hardy, 2025, Journal of the Peripheral Nervous System)
- Clinical phenotypes of different MPZ (P0) mutations may include Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1B, Dejerine-Sottas, and congenital hypomyelination.(L. E. Warner, M. Hilz, S. Appel, J. Killian, E. Kolodny, G. Karpati, S. Carpenter, G. Watters, Calvin S. Wheeler, D. R. Witt, A. Bodell, E. Nelis, C. Broeckhoven, J. Lupski, 1996, Neuron)
- Phenotypic clustering in MPZ mutations.(Michael E Shy, Agnes Jáni, Karen Krajewski, Marina Grandis, Richard A Lewis, Jun Li, Rosemary R Shy, Janne Balsamo, Jack Lilien, James Y Garbern, John Kamholz, 2004, Brain : a journal of neurology)
- Homomeric interactions of the MPZ Ig domain and their relation to Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease.(Christopher P. Ptak, Tabitha A. Peterson, Jesse B. Hopkins, C. Ahern, M. Shy, R. Piper, 2023, Brain)
- Disrupting the transmembrane domain interface between PMP22 and MPZ causes peripheral neuropathy(N. Pashkova, Tabitha A. Peterson, Christopher P. Ptak, S. Winistorfer, Debbie Guerrero-Given, Naomi Kamasawa, Christopher A. Ahern, Michael E. Shy, Robert C. Piper, 2023, bioRxiv)
- Homomeric interactions between IG domains of the MPZ (P0) myelin adhesion protein provide structural context for multiple disease mechanisms(Christopher P. Ptak, Tabitha A. Peterson, Jesse B. Hopkins, Christopher A. Ahern, Michael E. Shy, Robert C. Piper, 2024, Biophysical Journal)
- Neuropathy-related mutations alter the membrane binding properties of the human myelin protein P0 cytoplasmic tail(A. Raasakka, S. Ruskamo, R. Barker, Oda C. Krokengen, G. H. Vatne, Cecilie K. Kristiansen, E. Hallin, M. Skoda, U. Bergmann, Hanna Wacklin-Knecht, N. Jones, Søren Vrønning Hoffmann, P. Kursula, 2019, PLOS ONE)
- Impact of I30T and I30M substitution in MPZ gene associated with Dejerine-Sottas syndrome type B (DSSB): A molecular modeling and dynamics.(A. Agrahari, C. George Priya Doss, 2015, Journal of Theoretical Biology)
- Novel mutation in the MPZ gene causes early-onset but slow-progressive Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease in a Russian family: a case report(A. A. Kozina, N. V. Baryshnikova, Anna Ilinskaya, A. Kim, N. Plotnikov, N. A. Pogodina, E. Surkova, P. A. Shatalov, V. V. Ilinsky, 2022, Journal of International Medical Research)
- MPZ gene variant site in Chinese patients with Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease(X. Hao, Chong Li, Yunguo Lv, Tongtong Zhou, Hao Tian, Yaru Ma, Jiangwei Ding, Xinxiao Li, Yangyang Wang, Lei Wang, Ping Yang, 2022, Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine)
- Myelin protein zero (MPZ) gene mutations in nonduplication type 1 Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease.(B B Roa, L E Warner, C A Garcia, D Russo, R Lovelace, P F Chance, J R Lupski, 1996, Human mutation)
- Clinical features and molecular modelling of novel MPZ mutations in demyelinating and axonal neuropathies.(Paola Mandich, Paola Fossa, Simona Capponi, Alessandro Geroldi, Massimo Acquaviva, Rossella Gulli, Paola Ciotti, Fiore Manganelli, Marina Grandis, Emilia Bellone, 2009, European journal of human genetics : EJHG)
- Myelin protein zero mutation-related hereditary neuropathies: Neuropathological insight from a new nerve biopsy cohort.(Juliane Bremer, Axel Meinhardt, Istvan Katona, Jan Senderek, Elke K Kämmerer-Gassler, Andreas Roos, Andreas Ferbert, J Michael Schröder, Stefan Nikolin, Kay Nolte, Bernd Sellhaus, Klimentina Popzhelyazkova, Frank Tacke, Ulrike Schara-Schmidt, Eva Neuen-Jacob, Chantal Ceuterick de Groote, Peter de Jonghe, Vincent Timmerman, Jonathan Baets, Joachim Weis, 2024, Brain pathology (Zurich, Switzerland))
- A double point mutation in the DNA-binding region of Egr2 switches its function from inhibition to induction of proliferation: A potential contribution to the development of congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy.(P. Arthur-Farraj, R. Mirsky, D. Parkinson, K. Jessen, 2006, Neurobiology of Disease)
- Phylogenetically Conserved Sequences Around Myelin P0 Stop Codon are Essential for Translational Readthrough to Produce L-MPZ(Y. Yamaguchi, H. Baba, 2018, Neurochemical Research)
- Congenital hypomyelination neuropathy with Ser72Leu substitution in PMP22.(A. Simonati, G. Fabrizi, A. Pasquinelli, F. Taioli, T. Cavallaro, M. Morbin, G. Marcon, M. Papini, N. Rizzuto, 1999, Neuromuscular Disorders)
蛋白质错配引发的内质网应激与细胞应激响应
该组深入探讨了DSD的微观分子机制,特别是变异蛋白(MPZ, PMP22)导致的内质网应激(ER Stress)、未折叠蛋白反应(UPR)激活及聚集体形成。研究涉及XBP1s、Calnexin分子伴侣以及自噬通路在清除错误折叠蛋白、维持施旺细胞蛋白稳态中的作用。
- The protective role of mesencephalic astrocyte-derived neurotrophic factor in endoplasmic reticulum stress in RT4-D6P2T schwannoma sells with the S63del MPZ mutation.(Bo Sun, Hong-fen Wang, Yanran Li, Zhengqing He, F. Cui, Fei Yang, Xusheng Huang, 2022, Frontiers in Bioscience-Landmark)
- Pathology of a mouse mutation in peripheral myelin protein P0 is characteristic of a severe and early onset form of human Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1B disorder(Annette E. Rünker, I. Kobsar, T. Fink, G. Loers, T. Tilling, Peggy Putthoff, C. Wessig, R. Martini, M. Schachner, 2004, The Journal of Cell Biology)
- Altered trafficking and adhesion function of MPZ mutations and phenotypes of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease 1B.(Wataru Matsuyama, Masanori Nakagawa, Hiroshi Takashima, Mitsuhiro Osame, 2002, Acta neuropathologica)
- Aminosalicylic acid reduces ER stress and Schwann cell death induced by MPZ mutations(E. Chang, Won Min Mo, H. Doo, Ji-Su Lee, H. Park, Byung-Ok Choi, Young B. Hong, 2019, International Journal of Molecular Medicine)
- Activation of XBP1s attenuates disease severity in models of proteotoxic Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1B.(Thierry Touvier, Francesca A Veneri, Anke Claessens, Cinzia Ferri, Rosa Mastrangelo, Noémie Sorgiati, Francesca Bianchi, Serena Valenzano, Ubaldo Del Carro, Cristina Rivellini, Phu Duong, Michael E Shy, Jeffery W Kelly, John Svaren, R Luke Wiseman, Maurizio D'Antonio, 2025, Brain : a journal of neurology)
- Ion mobility–mass spectrometry reveals the role of peripheral myelin protein dimers in peripheral neuropathy(S. Fantin, Kristine F. Parson, P. Yadav, Brock R. Juliano, Geoffrey C. Li, C. Sanders, M. Ohi, B. Ruotolo, 2021, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences)
- Peripheral myelin protein 22 kDa and protein zero: domain specific trans-interactions.(Birgit Hasse, Frank Bosse, Helmut Hanenberg, Hans Werner Müller, 2004, Molecular and cellular neurosciences)
- Colocalization Analysis of Peripheral Myelin Protein-22 and Lamin-B1 in the Schwann Cell Nuclei of Wt and TrJ Mice(M. D. Di Tomaso, Lucía Vázquez Alberdi, D. Olsson, Saira Cancela, A. Fernández, J. Rosillo, Ana Laura Reyes Ábalos, Magdalena Álvarez Zabaleta, M. Calero, A. Kun, 2022, Biomolecules)
- The cellular response to aggregated proteins associated with human disease.(2002, Journal of Clinical Investigation)
- Emerging Role for Autophagy in the Removal of Aggresomes in Schwann Cells(J. Fortun, W. Dunn, S. Joy, Jie Li, L. Notterpek, 2003, The Journal of Neuroscience)
- Glycan-independent Role of Calnexin in the Intracellular Retention of Charcot-Marie-Tooth 1A Gas3/PMP22 Mutants*(Alessandra Fontanini, R. Chies, E. Snapp, M. Ferrarini, G. Fabrizi, C. Brancolini, 2005, Journal of Biological Chemistry)
- Impaired intracellular trafficking is a common disease mechanism of PMP22 point mutations in peripheral neuropathies.(R. Naef, U. Suter, 1999, Neurobiology of Disease)
EGR2等转录因子调控与辅助基因的遗传多样性
该组讨论了除PMP22/MPZ外的致病驱动因素。核心包括转录因子EGR2(Krox-20)和SOX10对髓鞘化基因的转录调控,以及新发现的辅助基因(如PRX, CCT5, SLC12A6, MFN2)突变如何扩展DSS的遗传谱系并影响内吞转运和轴突交互。
- A de novo EGR2 variant, c.1232A > G p.Asp411Gly, causes severe early-onset Charcot-Marie-Tooth Neuropathy Type 3 (Dejerine-Sottas Neuropathy)(B. Grosz, Natasha B Golovchenko, M. Ellis, K. Kumar, G. Nicholson, A. Antonellis, M. Kennerson, 2019, Scientific Reports)
- Screening of the early growth response 2 gene in Japanese patients with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1.(C. Numakura, E. Shirahata, S. Yamashita, Masayo Kanai, Kazuki Kijima, T. Matsuki, K. Hayasaka, 2003, Journal of the Neurological Sciences)
- Periaxin mutations cause recessive Dejerine-Sottas neuropathy.(C. Boerkoel, Hiroshi Takashima, P. Stankiewicz, Carlos A. Garcia, Steven M. Leber, Laila Rhee-Morris, J. Lupski, 2001, The American Journal of Human Genetics)
- A Novel CCT5 Missense Variant Associated with Early Onset Motor Neuropathy(Vincenzo Antona, F. Scalia, E. Giorgio, F. Radio, A. Brusco, M. Oliveri, G. Corsello, F. Lo Celso, M. Vadala', E. Conway de Macario, A. Macario, F. Cappello, M. Giuffré, 2020, International Journal of Molecular Sciences)
- Four novel point mutations in the PMP22 gene with phenotypes of HNPP and Dejerine–Sottas neuropathy(D. Brožková, R. Mazanec, Zdeněk Rychlý, J. Haberlova, J. Böhm, Jan Staněk, P. Plevova, Jana Lisoňová, J. Sabová, I. Sakmaryová, Pavel Seeman, 2011, Muscle & Nerve)
- Functional consequences of mutations in the early growth response 2 gene (EGR2) correlate with severity of human myelinopathies.(L. E. Warner, John Svaren, Jeffrey Milbrandt, J. R. Lupski, J. R. Lupski, 1999, Human Molecular Genetics)
- Regulation of myelin-specific gene expression. Relevance to CMT1.(J Kamholz, R Awatramani, D Menichella, H Jiang, W Xu, M Shy, 1999, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences)
- Disruption of Endosomal Sorting in Schwann Cells Leads to Defective Myelination and Endosomal Abnormalities Observed in Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease(J. McLean, Julie A. Wilson, Tina Tian, Jennifer A. Watson, Mary VanHart, A. Bean, S. Scherer, D. Crossman, E. Ubogu, Scott M. Wilson, 2022, The Journal of Neuroscience)
- EGR2 gene‐linked hereditary neuropathies present with a bimodal age distribution at symptoms onset(A. Echaniz-Laguna, C. Cauquil, J. Chanson, C. Tard, L. Guyant‐Maréchal, T. Kuntzer, I. Ion, A. Lia, J. Bouligand, Vianney Poinsignon, 2023, Journal of the Peripheral Nervous System)
- Search for mutations in the EGR2 corepressor proteins, NAB1 and NAB2, in human peripheral neuropathies(K. Venken, E. Di Maria, E. Bellone, P. Balestra, D. Cassandrini, P. Mandich, P. de Jonghe, V. Timmerman, J. Svaren, 2002, Neurogenetics)
- A novel case of concurrent occurrence of demyelinating-polyneuropathy-causing PMP22 duplication and SOX10 gene mutation producing severe hypertrophic neuropathy(N. Matsuda, Koushi Ootsuki, Shunsuke Kobayashi, Ayaka Nemoto, H. Kubo, S. Usami, Kazuaki Kanani, 2021, BMC Neurology)
- Genetic spectrum of hereditary neuropathies with onset in the first year of life(J. Baets, T. Deconinck, E. De Vriendt, M. Zimon, L. Yperzeele, K. Van Hoorenbeeck, K. Peeters, R. Spiegel, Y. Parman, B. Ceulemans, P. van Bogaert, A. Pou-Serradell, G. Bernert, A. Dinopoulos, M. Auer-Grumbach, S. Sallinen, G. Fabrizi, F. Pauly, P. V. D. Van den Bergh, B. Bilir, E. Battaloğlu, R. Madrid, D. Kabzińska, A. Kochański, H. Topaloğlu, G. Miller, A. Jordanova, V. Timmerman, P. de Jonghe, 2011, Brain)
- EGR2 mutation enhances phenotype spectrum of Dejerine-Sottas syndrome.(Elena Gargaun, Andreea Mihaela Seferian, Ruxandra Cardas, Anne-Gaelle Le Moing, Catherine Delanoe, Juliette Nectoux, Isabelle Nelson, Gisèle Bonne, Marie-Thérèse Bihoreau, Jean-François Deleuze, Anne Boland, Cécile Masson, Laurent Servais, Teresa Gidaro, 2016, Journal of neurology)
- De novo variants in SLC12A6 cause sporadic early-onset progressive sensorimotor neuropathy(Joohyun Park, Bianca Flores, K. Scherer, H. Kuepper, M. Rossi, K. Rupprich, M. Rautenberg, Natalie Deininger, Annette Weichselbaum, A. Grimm, M. Sturm, U. Grasshoff, E. Delpire, T. Haack, 2019, Journal of Medical Genetics)
- EGR2 mutation R359W causes a spectrum of Dejerine-Sottas neuropathy(C. Boerkoel, H. Takashima, C. Bacino, D. Daentl, J. Lupski, 2001, Neurogenetics)
- Frequency of mutations in the early growth response 2 gene associated with peripheral demyelinating neuropathies(N. Vandenberghe, M. Upadhyaya, A. Gatignol, L. Boutrand, M. Boucherat, G. Chazot, A. Vandenberghe, P. Latour, 2002, Journal of Medical Genetics)
- Novel missense mutation in the early growth response 2 gene associated with Dejerine–Sottas syndrome phenotype(Vincent Timmerman, P. D. Jonghe, C. Ceuterick, E. D. Vriendt, A. Löfgren, E. Nelis, L. E. Warner, J. R. Lupski, J. Martin, C. Broeckhoven, 1999, Neurology)
- A novel homozygous mutation of the myelin Po gene producing Dejerine-Sottas disease (hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type III).(T. Ikegami, Garth A. Nicholson, H. Ikeda, Akihiro Ishida, H. Johnston, G. Wise, Robert A. Ouvrier, Kiyoshi Hayasaka, 1996, Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications)
- Novel Compound Heterozygous Nonsense PRX Mutations in a Korean Dejerine-Sottas Neuropathy Family(Ye-Ji Choi, Y. S. Hyun, S. H. Nam, H. Koo, Young B. Hong, K. Chung, Byung-Ok Choi, 2014, Journal of Clinical Neurology)
临床病理特征评价与多模态影像诊断
该组文献聚焦于DSD的表型识别,包括神经活检中的“洋葱球”结构、髓鞘发育不良、神经电生理的传导速度显著减慢,以及近年来利用神经超声无创评估神经肥厚和施旺细胞-轴突交互异常的新方法。
- Dejerine–Sottas disease in childhood—Genetic and sonographic heterogeneity(Sanne M. R. Hobbelink, Cain R Brockley, R. Kennedy, K. Carroll, K. de Valle, P. Rao, M. Davis, N. Laing, N. Voermans, M. Ryan, E. Yiu, 2018, Brain and Behavior)
- Peripheral Nerve Ultrasound in Children with Dejerine-Sottas Disease (P4.084)(E. Yiu, Sanne M. R. Hobbelink, M. Ryan, 2016, Neurology)
- Abnormal Schwann Cell‐Axon Interactions in CMT Neuropathies: The Effects of Mutant Schwann Cells on the Axonal Cytoskeleton and Regeneration‐Associated Myelination(Z. Sahenk, 1999, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences)
- Severe demyelinating hypertrophic polyneuropathy caused by a de novo frameshift mutation within the intracellular domain of myelin protein zero (MPZ/P0).(J. Zschüntzsch, P. Dibaj, S. Pilgram, J. Koetting, W. M. Gerding, C. Neusch, 2009, Journal of the Neurological Sciences)
- Abnormal Schwann cell/axon interactions in the Trembler‐J mouse(A. Robertson, R. King, J. Muddle, P. Thomas, 1997, Journal of Anatomy)
- Distinct disease mechanisms in peripheral neuropathies due to altered peripheral myelin protein 22 gene dosage or a Pmp22 point mutation.(Guya Giambonini-Brugnoli, Johanna Buchstaller, L. Sommer, U. Suter, N. Mantei, 2005, Neurobiology of Disease)
- Dejerine-Sottas disease with sensorineural hearing loss, nystagmus, and peripheral facial nerve weakness: de novo dominant point mutation of the PMP22 gene.(V. Ionasescu, C. Searby, Steven A. Greenberg, 1996, Journal of Medical Genetics)
- Sural nerve biopsy and functional studies support the pathogenic role of a novel MPZ mutation(V. Prada, S. Capponi, G. Ursino, A. Albertí, I. Callegari, M. Passalacqua, R. Marotta, P. Mandich, E. Bellone, A. Schenone, M. Grandis, 2015, Neuropathology)
- Clinical-electromyographic diagnosis of Dejerine Sottas syndrome in a neonatal ICU: case report(Lorena Vilela Rezende, A. B. Ortega, Mariah Pereira Andrade Vallim, Giulia Vilela Silva, R. Júnior, Mônica Alexandra de Conto, S. Henrique, Elisabete Coelho Auersvald, Daniel Almeida do Valle, 2024, Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria)
- Severe hypomyelination and marked abnormality of conduction in Dejerine-Sottas hypertrophic neuropathy: myelin thickness and compound action potential of sural nerve in vitro.(J. D. Peter, Edward H. Lambert, Kathryn E. Sanders, Peter C. O'Brien, 1971, Mayo Clinic Proceedings)
- Hypermyelination and demyelinating peripheral neuropathy in Pmp22-deficient mice(K. Adlkofer, R. Martini, A. Aguzzi, J. Zielasek, K. Toyka, U. Suter, 1995, Nature Genetics)
- Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1A: morphological phenotype of the 17p duplication versus PMP22 point mutations(A. Gabreëls-Festen, P. A. Bolhuis, J. Hoogendijk, L. Valentijn, E. Eshuis, F. Gabreëls, 2004, Acta Neuropathologica)
- Hereditary demyelinating neuropathy of infancy. A genetically complex syndrome.(J. Tyson, D. Ellis, Ú. Fairbrother, R. King, F. Muntoni, J. Jacobs, S. Malcolm, A. Harding, P. Thomas, 1997, Brain)
- The electrophysiologic profile of Dejerine–Sottas disease (HMSN III)(T. Benstead, N. Kuntz, Robert G. Miller, J. Daube, 1990, Muscle & Nerve)
- Clinicopathological and genetic study of early-onset demyelinating neuropathy.(Y. Parman, E. Battaloğlu, I. Baris, B. Bilir, M. Poyraz, N. Bissar‐Tadmouri, Anna C. Williams, N. Ammar, E. Nelis, V. Timmerman, P. de Jonghe, Ayaz Najafov, F. Deymeer, P. Serdarog̃lu, P. Brophy, G. Said, 2004, Brain)
- Segmental demyelinization in Dejerine-Sottas disease: light, phase-contrast, and electron microscopic studies.(P. Dyck, M. Gomez, 1968, Mayo Clinic Proceedings)
- HISTOLOGIC AND LIPID STUDIES OF SURAL NERVES IN INHERITED HYPERTROPHIC NEUROPATHY: PRELIMINARY REPORT OF A LIPID ARNORMALITY IN NERVE AND LIVER IN DEJERINE-SOTTAS DISEASE(P. Dyck, R. Ellefson, A. Lais, R. C. Smith, W. Taylor, R. Dyke, 1970, Mayo Clinic Proceedings)
- Hypertrophic interstitial neuropathy and cataracts(Gerald N. Cold, L. Hogenhuis, 1968, Neurology)
- Histopathology of the Inner Ear in Charcot-Marie-Tooth Syndrome Caused by a Missense Variant (p.Thr65Ala) in the MPZ Gene(Joseph B. Nadol Jr., E. Hedley-Whyte, S. Amr, Jennifer T. O'Malley, Takefumi Kamakura, 2019, Audiology and Neurotology)
- Dejerine-Sottas syndrome and vestibular loss due to a point mutation in the PMP22 gene.(J. Jen, Robert H. Baloh, A. Ishiyama, R. Baloh, 2005, Journal of the Neurological Sciences)
- Déjerine–Sottas syndrome: Prenatal and postnatal postural and motor assessment(N. Burger, B. M. E. Adriaanse, R. J. Vermeulen, M. B. Tan-Sindhunata, J. D. de Vries, 2016, Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology)
遗传流行病学综述与基因型-表型关联分析
这些文献提供了DSS及其相关CMT亚型的宏观视角,涵盖了大规模的人群流行病学调查、家族性病例系列报告以及复杂遗传现象(如同伴存在的双基因突变)。旨在建立从临床症状到分子分型的精确对应关系。
- Genetic epidemiology of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease.(G J Braathen, 2012, Acta neurologica Scandinavica. Supplementum)
- Clinical and Genetic Aspects of Childhood-Onset Demyelinating Charcot–Marie–Tooth's Disease in Brazil(R. I. L. Machado, Paulo Victor Sgobbi Souza, I. Farias, Bruno Mattos Lombardi Badia, José Marcos Vieira de Albuquerque Filho, Ricello José Vieira Lima, W. B. Pinto, A. Oliveira, 2021, Journal of Pediatric Genetics)
- A case report of two Moroccan patients with hereditary neurological disorders and molecular modeling study on the S72L de novo PMP22 variant.(C. Ait El Cadi, L. Dafrallah, G. Amalou, M. Charif, H. Charoute, A. Araqi-houssaini, H. Lakhiari, G. Lenaers, A. Barakat, 2023, Revue Neurologique)
- Molecular genetics of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease and related neuropathies.(P. Chance, K. Fischbeck, 1994, Human Molecular Genetics)
- [A genotyping study of 13 cases of early-onset Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease].(Jialu Xu, Yi Zhang, Congying Zhao, Pei-fang Jiang, Zhefeng Yuan, Yonglin Yu, Zhe-zhi Xia, F. Gao, 2019, Zhongguo dang dai er ke za zhi = Chinese journal of contemporary pediatrics)
- Inherited demyelinating neuropathies with micromutations of peripheral myelin protein 22 gene.(F. Taioli, Ilaria Cabrini, T. Cavallaro, M. Acler, G. Fabrizi, 2011, Brain)
- Analysis of compound heterozygous mice reveals that the Trembler mutation can behave as a gain‐of‐function allele(K. Adlkofer, R. Naef, U. Suter, 1997, Journal of Neuroscience Research)
- One PMP22/MPZ and Three MFN2/GDAP1 Concomitant Variants Occurred in a Cohort of 189 Chinese Charcot-Marie-Tooth Families(Yongzhi Xie, Zhiqiang Lin, Xiao-bo Li, Lei Liu, Shun-xiang Huang, Huadong Zhao, Bing Wang, W. Cao, Zhe Hu, Ji-feng Guo, Lu Shen, B. Tang, Ruxu Zhang, 2022, Frontiers in Neurology)
- Spectrum of mutations in Finnish patients with Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth disease and related neuropathies(K. Silander, P. Meretoja, V. Juvonen, J. Ignatius, H. Pihko, A. Saarinen, T. Wallden, E. Herrgård, P. Aula, M. Savontaus, 1998, Human Mutation)
- Recessive inheritance of a new point mutation of the PMP22 gene in Dejerine‐Sottas disease(Y. Parman, V. Planté-Bordeneuve, A. Guiochon‐Mantel, M. Eraksoy, G. Said, 1999, Annals of Neurology)
- Genetic evaluation of inherited motor/sensory neuropathy.(Phillip F Chance, 2004, Supplements to Clinical neurophysiology)
- [Molecular genetics of inherited neuropathies].(Hiroshi Takashima, 2006, Rinsho shinkeigaku = Clinical neurology)
- [Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease].(Nazha Birouk, 2009, Presse medicale (Paris, France : 1983))
- Mutations in the peripheral myelin genes and associated genes in inherited peripheral neuropathies.(E Nelis, N Haites, C Van Broeckhoven, 1999, Human mutation)
- Hereditary demyelinating motor and sensory neuropathy.(A Gabreëls-Festen, F Gabreëls, 1993, Brain pathology (Zurich, Switzerland))
- Demyelinating and axonal features of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease with mutations of myelin-related proteins (PMP22, MPZ and Cx32): a clinicopathological study of 205 Japanese patients.(Naoki Hattori, Masahiko Yamamoto, Tsuyoshi Yoshihara, Haruki Koike, Masanori Nakagawa, Hiroo Yoshikawa, Akio Ohnishi, Kiyoshi Hayasaka, Osamu Onodera, Masayuki Baba, Hitoshi Yasuda, Toyokazu Saito, Kenji Nakashima, Jun-ichi Kira, Ryuji Kaji, Nobuyuki Oka, Gen Sobue, 2003, Brain : a journal of neurology)
- Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease and related inherited neuropathies.(T Murakami, C A Garcia, L T Reiter, J R Lupski, 1996, Medicine)
- Inherited peripheral neuropathy.(M P Keller, P F Chance, 1999, Seminars in neurology)
- Screening for mutations in the peripheral myelin genes PMP22, MPZ and Cx32 (GJB1) in Russian Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth neuropathy patients(Irina V. Mersiyanova, Sookhrat M. Ismailov, Alexander V. Polyakov, E. Dadali, Valeriy P. Fedotov, E. Nelis, A. Löfgren, Vincent Timmerman, Christine Van Broeckhoven, Oleg V. Evgrafov, 2000, Journal of the Peripheral Nervous System)
- [Molecular mechanisms of hereditary neuropathy: genotype-phenotype correlation].(Masanori Nakagawa, Hiroshi Takashima, 2003, Rinsho byori. The Japanese journal of clinical pathology)
- Expanding the phenotypic spectrum of Dejerine-Sottas syndrome caused by the trembler mutation(Mustafa Jaffry, Soumya Bouchachi, Mohsen Ahmed, Steve N. Gad, S. Sathe, N. Souayah, 2022, neurogenetics)
- Extending The Clinical Spectrum of Dejerine Sottas Syndrome: A new Family With Cognitive Impairment And Hearing Loss Carrying Trembler Mutation (P1.9-048)(Soumya Bouchachi, N. Souayah, 2019, Neurology)
- The range of chronic demyelinating neuropathy of infancy: a clinico-pathological and genetic study of 15 unrelated cases(V. Planté-Bordeneuve, Y. Parman, A. Guiochon‐Mantel, Y. Alj, F. Deymeer, P. Serdarog̃lu, M. Eraksoy, G. Said, 2001, Journal of Neurology)
- Infantile demyelinating neuropathy associated with a de novo point mutation on Ser72 in PMP22 and basal lamina onion bulbs in skin biopsy.(C. Ceuterick‐de Groote, P. de Jonghe, V. Timmerman, G. van Goethem, A. Löfgren, B. Ceulemans, C. van Broeckhoven, J. Martin, 2001, Pathology - Research and Practice)
- Characterization of a Portuguese family with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1E due to a novel point mutation in the PMP22 gene.(Marco Fernandes, A. Caetano, L. Castelhano, Luís Santos, 2021, Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery)
- Absence of mutations in peripheral myelin protein-22, myelin protein zero, and connexin 32 in autosomal recessive Dejerine-Sottas syndrome.(F. Stögbauer, P. Young, H. Wiebusch, V. Timmerman, G. Kuhlenbäumer, E. Nelis, E. Ringelstein, G. Kurlemann, G. Assmann, C. van Broeckhoven, H. Funke, 1998, Neuroscience Letters)
- Molecular genetics of autosomal-dominant demyelinating Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease.(Henry Houlden, Mary M Reilly, 2006, Neuromolecular medicine)
- Molecular basis of hereditary neuropathies.(P F Chance, 2001, Physical medicine and rehabilitation clinics of North America)
- Inherited neuropathies: from gene to disease.(M P Keller, P F Chance, 1999, Brain pathology (Zurich, Switzerland))
- [Hereditary peripheral neuropathies].(Jean-Michel Vallat, Mériem Tazir, Judith Calvo, Benoît Funalot, 2009, Presse medicale (Paris, France : 1983))
- Inherited neuropathies(P. Chance, M. Reilly, 1994, Current Opinion in Neurology)
- Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease and related neuropathies: Molecular basis for distinction and diagnosis(D. Pareyson, 1999, Muscle & Nerve)
- Dejerine–Sottas syndrome grown to maturity: overview of genetic and morphological heterogeneity and follow‐up of 25 patients *(A. Gabreëls-Festen, 2002, Journal of Anatomy)
- Dejerine–Sottas disease and hereditary demyelinating polyneuropathy of infancy(V. Planté-Bordeneuve, G. Said, 2002, Muscle & Nerve)
- The hypertrophic forms of hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy. A study of hypertrophic Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (HMSN type I) and Dejerine-Sottas disease (HMSN type III) in childhood.(R. Ouvrier, J. McLeod, T. E. Conchin, 1987, Brain)
动物模型开发与实验性治疗策略探索
该组文献聚焦于转化研究,利用转基因小鼠(如Trembler-J)、大鼠及犬类模型验证致病机制,并测试潜在疗法,包括姜黄素、UPR调节剂(IFB-088)、等位基因特异性siRNA等手段对周围神经病变的缓解作用。
- Treatment with IFB-088 Improves Neuropathy in CMT1A and CMT1B Mice(Yunhong Bai, Caroline Treins, Vera G. Volpi, C. Scapin, C. Ferri, R. Mastrangelo, T. Touvier, F. Florio, F. Bianchi, U. Del Carro, F. Baas, David S. Wang, P. Miniou, P. Guedat, M. Shy, M. D’Antonio, 2021, Molecular Neurobiology)
- Pmp22 mutant allele-specific siRNA alleviates demyelinating neuropathic phenotype in vivo.(Ji-Su Lee, E. Chang, O. Koo, Dong Hwan Jwa, Won Min Mo, G. Kwak, Hyo Won Moon, H. Park, Young B. Hong, Byung-Ok Choi, 2017, Neurobiology of Disease)
- Curcumin and Ethanol Effects in Trembler-J Schwann Cell Culture(Lucía Vázquez Alberdi, G. Rosso, Lucia Velóz, Carlos Romeo, Joaquina Farias, M. D. Di Tomaso, M. Calero, A. Kun, 2022, Biomolecules)
- Animal models for inherited peripheral neuropathies(R. Martini, 1997, Journal of Anatomy)
- Improved Neuromuscular Junction in R98C Mpz Heterozygous Mice Treated with IFB-088 (S21.010)(Yunhong Bai, David Wang, Xingyao Wu, M. Lamarche, Michael E. Shy, 2024, Neurology)
- Schwann cell targeting via intrasciatic injection of AAV8 as gene therapy strategy for peripheral nerve regeneration(Judit Homs, L. Ariza, G. Pagès, E. Udina, E. Udina, Xavier Navarro, Xavier Navarro, M. Chillón, A. Bosch, 2011, Gene Therapy)
- Disease mechanisms and potential therapeutic strategies in Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease.(P Young, U Suter, 2001, Brain research. Brain research reviews)
- Influence of elevated expression of rat wild-type PMP22 and its mutant PMP22Trembler on cell growth of NIH3T3 fibroblasts(Georg Zoidl, Donatella D'Urso, S. Blass-Kampmann, Corinne Schmalenbach, R. Kuhn, H. Müller, 1997, Cell and Tissue Research)
- Genotype-phenotype characteristics and baseline natural history of heritable neuropathies caused by mutations in the MPZ gene.(O. Sanmaneechai, S. Feely, S. Scherer, D. Herrmann, J. Burns, F. Muntoni, Jun Li, C. Siskind, J. Day, M. Laurá, C. Sumner, T. Lloyd, S. Ramchandren, R. Shy, T. Grider, Chelsea J. Bacon, R. Finkel, S. Yum, I. Moroni, G. Piscosquito, D. Pareyson, M. Reilly, M. Shy, 2015, Brain)
- Development of early postnatal peripheral nerve abnormalities in Trembler‐J and PMP22 transgenic mice(A. Robertson, C. Huxley, R. King, P. Thomas, 1999, Journal of Anatomy)
- Transgenic mouse models of CMT1A and HNPP.(U Suter, K A Nave, 1999, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences)
- Canine models of Charcot-Marie-Tooth: MTMR2, MPZ, and SH3TC2 variants in golden retrievers with congenital hypomyelinating polyneuropathy.(Neuromuscular Disorders, S. Cook, Blair N Hooser, D. C. Williams, G. Kortz, M. Aleman, K. Minor, Jennifer A. Koziol, S. Friedenberg, Jonah N Cullen, G. Shelton, Kari J. Ekenstedt, 2023, Neuromuscular Disorders)
- Rodent models with expression of PMP22: Relevance to dysmyelinating CMT and HNPP.(Maxime Jouaud, Stéphane Mathis, Laurence Richard, Anne-Sophie Lia, Laurent Magy, Jean-Michel Vallat, 2019, Journal of the neurological sciences)
- Oral curcumin mitigates the clinical and neuropathologic phenotype of the Trembler-J mouse: a potential therapy for inherited neuropathy.(M. Khajavi, K. Shiga, W. Wiszniewski, F. He, C. Shaw, Jiong Yan, T. Wensel, G. Snipes, J. Lupski, 2007, The American Journal of Human Genetics)
- Curcumin treatment abrogates endoplasmic reticulum retention and aggregation-induced apoptosis associated with neuropathy-causing myelin protein zero-truncating mutants.(M. Khajavi, Ken Inoue, W. Wiszniewski, Tomoko Ohyama, G. Snipes, J. R. Lupski, J. R. Lupski, 2005, The American Journal of Human Genetics)
- [Hereditary neuropathy: recent advance].(Masanori Nakagawa, 2008, Rinsho shinkeigaku = Clinical neurology)
- Enhancement of Schwann cell myelin formation by K252a in the Trembler‐J mouse dorsal root ganglion explant culture(Ning Liu, S. Varma, E. Shooter, R. Tolwani, 2005, Journal of Neuroscience Research)
- Understanding Schwann cell–neurone interactions: the key to Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease? *(M. Maier, P. Berger, U. Suter, 2002, Journal of Anatomy)
本报告综合了Dejerine-Sottas综合征(DSD)从遗传发现到致病机制及治疗探索的全方位研究。核心研究重点已从最初的PMP22和MPZ基因突变鉴定,深入到蛋白质错配引起的内质网应激、细胞内转运障碍以及转录调控失衡。临床诊断正通过神经超声和多基因测序不断精确化,而基于蛋白质稳态调节和基因干预的转化医学研究正通过多样化的动物模型逐步向临床应用迈进。
总计158篇相关文献
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Objective – To describe a patient with the Dejerine–Sottas’ syndrome due to a de novo Ser72Leu amino acid substitution in the PMP22 protein and summarize the phenotype associated with this frequent mutation.
Dejerine‐Sottas syndrome (DSS), a severe demyelinating peripheral neuropathy with onset in infancy, has been associated with mutations in either PMP22 or MPZ. Most cases of DSS are caused by a single heterozygous dominant point mutation. We identified three de novo point mutations in MPZ exon 3 in a sporadic DSS patient. These three point mutations occur on the same allele and result in three novel amino acid substitutions: Ile(85)Thr, Asn(87)His, and Asp(99)Asn. Our data raise the question as to the potential mechanism(s) involved in the formation of multiple point mutations at a given locus. Hum Mutat 10:21–24, 1997. © 1997 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Hereditary neurological disorders represent a wild group of hereditary illnesses affecting mainly the nervous system, the majority of which have a Mendelian inheritance pattern. Here we present the case of two Moroccan patients each affected by a different hereditary neurological disorder. In the first patient WES analysis revealed the presence of the p.Ser72Leu de novo mutation in the PMP22 gene reported for the first time in Africa, specifically in Morocco. This variant is predicted to be in a mutation "hot-spot" region causing Dejerine-Sottas syndrome called also Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 3. The molecular modeling study suggests an important alteration of hydrogen and hydrophobic interactions between the residue in position 72 of the PMP22 protein and its surrounding amino acids. On the other hand, the p.Ala177Thr mutation on the RNASEH2B gene, responsible of Aicardi-Goutières syndrome 2, was carried in a homozygous state by the second patient descending from a consanguineous family. This mutation is common among the Moroccan population as well as in other North African countries. The present results contributed to a better follow-up of both cases allowing better symptom management with convenient treatments.
Abstract Heterozygous deletions of the gene PMP22 are associated to hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP), a demyelinating neuromuscular disease causing variable transitory focal muscles weakness. Deletions involving both copies of PMP22 cause more severe phenotypes, with early-onset neuropathy and impairment in motor development. We report a patient with a severe early-onset demyelinating neuropathy, caused by two different inherited deletions of PMP22, whose parents had an HNPP. The patient showed neurological signs and delay in motor development but normal intellective abilities. A motor and sensitive conduction study showed severe signs of demyelination, suggestive for Dejerine Sottas Syndrome (DSS). The patient's father had a typical HNPP caused by a heterozygous 17p11.2 deletion, encompassing PMP22. The patient's mother reported no neuropathic symptoms, but in a nerve conduction studies, parents and several relatives showed signs of sensory–motor deficit with focal slowing of conduction at common sites of entrapment. Quantitative analysis of PMP22, performed in our patient by multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification, revealed a compound heterozygous status with the same deletion of the father and a deletion of PMP22 exon 5, after proved to be inherited from the mother. Therefore, when we face an early-onset, severe form of neuropathy, we have to consider rare forms of hereditary neuropathy caused by homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations in PMP22, even if parents are asymptomatic; an exhaustive family history and an electrodiagnostic study are essential to guide genetic tests and to make a diagnosis.
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Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth disease (CMT) and related inherited peripheral neuropathies, including Dejerine‐Sottas syndrome, congenital hypomyelination, and hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP), are caused by mutations in three myelin genes: PMP22, MPZ and Cx32 (GJB1). The most common mutations are the 1.5 Mb CMT1A tandem duplication on chromosome 17p11.2‐p12 in CMT1 patients and the reciprocal 1.5 Mb deletion in HNPP patients. We performed a mutation screening in 174 unrelated CMT patients and three HNPP families of Russian origin. The unrelated CMT patients included 108 clinically and electrophysiologically diagnosed CMT1 cases, 32 CMT2 cases, and 34 cases with unspecified CMT. Fifty‐nine CMT1A duplications were found, of which 58 belonged to the CMT1 patient group. We found twelve distinct mutations in Cx32, six mutations in MPZ, and two mutations in PMP22. Of these respectively, eight, five, and two lead to a CMT1 phenotype. Eight mutations (Cx32: Ile20Asn/Gly21Ser, Met34Lys, Leu90Val, and Phe193Leu; MPZ: Asp134Gly, Lys138Asn, and Thr139Asn; PMP22: ValSer25‐26del) were not reported previously. Phenotype–genotype correlations were based on nerve conduction velocity studies and mutation type. Hum Mutat 15:340–347, 2000. © 2000 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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Missense point mutations in Gas3/PMP22 are responsible for the peripheral neuropathies Charcot-Marie-Tooth 1A and Dejerine Sottas syndrome. These mutations induce protein misfolding with the consequent accumulation of the proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum and the formation of aggresomes. During folding, Gas3/PMP22 associates with the lectin chaperone calnexin. Here, we show that calnexin interacts with the misfolded transmembrane domains of Gas3/PMP22, fused to green fluorescent protein, in a glycan-independent manner. In addition, photobleaching experiments in living cells revealed that Gas3/PMP22-green fluorescent protein mutants are mobile but diffuse at almost half the diffusion coefficient of wild type protein. Our results support emerging models for a glycan-independent chaperone role for calnexin and for the mechanism of retention of misfolded membrane proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum.
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Significance The myelin sheath surrounding human neurons acts as insulation and increases their rate of signal transmission. Peripheral myelin protein (PMP22) is a key transmembrane protein involved in neuron myelination, the dysfunction of which can lead to significant human neuropathies. This report provides direct evidence that disease-associated PMP22 mutants are unstable and can self-associate to form dimers to a greater extent than wild-type protein, providing mechanistic insight into diseases such as Charcot-Marie-Tooth and Dejerine–Sottas syndrome. To accomplish this, we link mass-selected gas-phase protein stability measurements to in vivo protein trafficking data, paving the way for the future use of such data in understanding such complex biochemical processes. Peripheral myelin protein (PMP22) is an integral membrane protein that traffics inefficiently even in wild-type (WT) form, with only 20% of the WT protein reaching its final plasma membrane destination in myelinating Schwann cells. Misfolding of PMP22 has been identified as a key factor in multiple peripheral neuropathies, including Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease and Dejerine–Sottas syndrome. While biophysical analyses of disease-associated PMP22 mutants show altered protein stabilities, leading to reduced surface trafficking and loss of PMP22 function, it remains unclear how destabilization of PMP22 mutations causes mistrafficking. Here, native ion mobility–mass spectrometry (IM-MS) is used to compare the gas phase stabilities and abundances for an array of mutant PM22 complexes. We find key differences in the PMP22 mutant stabilities and propensities to form homodimeric complexes. Of particular note, we observe that severely destabilized forms of PMP22 exhibit a higher propensity to dimerize than WT PMP22. Furthermore, we employ lipid raft–mimicking SCOR bicelles to study PMP22 mutants, and find that the differences in dimer abundances are amplified in this medium when compared to micelle-based data, with disease mutants exhibiting up to 4 times more dimer than WT when liberated from SCOR bicelles. We combine our findings with previous cellular data to propose that the formation of PMP22 dimers from destabilized monomers is a key element of PMP22 mistrafficking.
Our patient material included families and sporadic patients of Finnish origin with the diagnosis of Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth (CMT) disease types 1 and 2, Déjérine‐Sottas syndrome (DSS), and hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP). We screened for mutations in the peripheral myelin protein genes connexin 32 (Cx32), myelin protein zero (P0) and peripheral myelin protein 22 (PMP22) by direct sequencing. All patients chosen for mutation screening were negative for the 1.5 Mb duplication/deletion at 17p11.2‐p12. Eleven Cx32 mutations were found in 12 families, six with a CMT2 diagnosis, three with a CMT1 diagnosis and three with unclassified CMT. The total number of patients in these 12 CMTX families was 61, giving a minimum prevalence of 1.2/100,000 for CMTX in Finland. Four of the mutations, Pro58Arg, Pro172Leu, Asn175Asp and Leu204Phe, have not been previously reported. One male patient with an early onset CMT had a double Cx32 mutation, Arg22Gln and Val63Ile. The double de novo mutation was found to be of maternal grandpaternal origin. In the P0 gene a Ser78Leu mutation was found in one family with severe CMT1 and a de novo Tyr82Cys mutation was found in one DSS patient. Both mutations have been previously reported in other CMT1 families. A novel PMP22 mutation, deletion of Phe84, was found in one sporadic DSS patient. Our mutation screening results show the necessity of molecular diagnosis, in addition to clinical and electrophysiological evaluation, for proper subtyping of the disease and for accurate genetic counseling. Hum Mutat 12:59–68, 1998. © 1998 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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Variants in the myelin protein zero coding MPZ gene are responsible for a broad spectrum of peripheral demyelinating and axonal neuropathies, including different types of Charcot–Marie–Tooth diseases, challenging for genotype–phenotype correlation.
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PMP22 and MPZ are abundant myelin membrane proteins in Schwann cells. The MPZ adhesion protein holds myelin wraps together across the intraperiod line. PMP22 is a tetraspan protein belonging to the Claudin superfamily. Loss of either MPZ or PMP22 causes severe demyelinating Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) peripheral neuropathy, and duplication of PMP22 causes the most common form of CMT, CMT1A. Yet, the molecular functions provided by PMP22 and how its alteration causes CMT are unknown. Here we find MPZ and PMP22 form a specific complex through interfaces within their transmembrane domains. We also find that the PMP22 A67T patient variant that causes a loss-of-function (Hereditary Neuropathy with Pressure Palsies) phenotype maps to this interface, and blocks MPZ association without affecting localization to the plasma membrane or interactions with other proteins. These data define the molecular basis for the MPZ~PMP22 interaction and indicate this complex fulfills an important function in myelinating cells.
Congenital hypomyelinating polyneuropathy (HPN) restricted to the peripheral nervous system was reported in 1989 in two Golden Retriever (GR) littermates. Recently, four additional cases of congenital HPN in young, unrelated GRs were diagnosed via neurological examination, electrodiagnostic evaluation, and peripheral nerve pathology. Whole-genome sequencing was performed on all four GRs, and variants from each dog were compared to variants found across >1,000 other dogs, all presumably unaffected with HPN. Likely causative variants were identified for each HPN-affected GR. Two cases shared a homozygous splice donor site variant in MTMR2, with a stop codon introduced within six codons following the inclusion of the intron. One case had a heterozygous MPZ isoleucine to threonine substitution. The last case had a homozygous SH3TC2 nonsense variant predicted to truncate approximately one-half of the protein. Haplotype analysis using 524 GR established the novelty of the identified variants. Each variant occurs within genes that are associated with the human Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) group of heterogeneous diseases, affecting the peripheral nervous system. Testing a large GR population (n = >200) did not identify any dogs with these variants. Although these variants are rare within the general GR population, breeders should be cautious to avoid propagating these alleles.
Mutations in MPZ (Myelin Protein Zero) can cause demyelinating early-onset Charcot-Marie-Tooth Type1B disease or later onset Type2I/J disease characterized by axonal degeneration, reflecting the diverse roles of MPZ in Schwann cells. MPZ holds apposing membranes of the myelin sheath together, with the adhesion role fulfilled by its extracellular Immunoglobulin-like domain (IgMPZ), which oligomerizes. Models for how the IgMPZ might form oligomeric assemblies has been extrapolated from a protein crystal structure in which individual rat IgMPZ subunits are packed together under artificial conditions, forming 3 weak interfaces. One interface organizes the IgMPZ into tetramers, a second 'dimer' interface links tetramers together across the intraperiod line, and a third hydrophobic interface that mediates binding to lipid bilayers or the same hydrophobic surface on another IgMPZ domain. Presently, there are no data confirming whether the proposed IgMPZ interfaces actually mediate oligomerization in solution, whether they are required for the adhesion activity of MPZ, whether they are important for myelination, or whether their loss results in disease. We performed nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and small angle X-ray scattering analysis of wild-type IgMPZ as well as mutant forms with amino-acid substitutions designed to interrupt its presumptive oligomerization interfaces. Here, we confirm the interface that mediates IgMPZ tetramerization, but find that dimerization is mediated by a distinct interface that has yet to be identified. We next correlated different types of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease symptoms to subregions within IgMPZ tetramers. Variants causing axonal late-onset disease (CMT2I/J) map to surface residues of IgMPZ proximal to the transmembrane domain. Variants causing early-onset demyelinating disease (CMT1B) segregate into two groups: one is described by variants that disrupt the stability of the Ig-fold itself and are largely located within the core of the IgMPZ domain; whereas another describes a region on the surface of IgMPZ tetramers, accessible to protein interactions. Computational docking studies predict that this latter disease-relevant subregion may potentially mediate dimerization of IgMPZ tetramers.
Background and Aims Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of inherited peripheral neuropathies. The wide phenotypic variability may not be completely explained by a single mutation. Aims and Methods To explore the existence of concomitant variants in CMT, we enrolled 189 patients and performed molecular diagnosis by application of next-generation sequencing combined with multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification. We conducted a retrospective analysis of patients harboring coinherited variants in different genes. Results Four families were confirmed to possess variants in two genes, accounting for 2.1% (4/189) of the total in our cohort. One CMT1 patient with PMP22 duplication and MPZ variant (c.286A>C, p.K96Q) exhibited moderate neuropathy with infantile onset, while her father possessing MPZ variant was mildly affected with adolescence onset. A CMT2 patient with heterozygous variants in MFN2 (c.613_622delGTCACCACAG, p.V205Sfs*26) and GDAP1 (c.713G>T, p.W238L) exhibited childhood onset mild phenotype, while his mother with MFN2 variant developed bilateral pes cavus only. A CMT2 patient with heterozygous variants in MFN2 (c.839G>A, p.R280H) and GDAP1 (c.3G>T, p.M1?) presented infantile onset and rapid progression, while her father with MFN2 variant presented with absence of deep tendon reflexes. One sporadic CMT2 patient with early onset was confirmed harboring de novo MFN2 variant (c.1835C>T, p.S612F) and heterozygous GDAP1 variant (c.767A>G, p.H256R). Conclusion Our results suggest that the possibility of concomitant variants was not uncommon and should be considered when significant intrafamilial clinical heterogeneity is observed.
BACKGROUND Endoplasmic reticulum stress (ERS) occurred in S63del mutant CMT1B mice model, and few drugs has been studied. Mesencephalic astrocyte-derived neurotrophic factor (MANF) can inhibit ERS. This study aimed at investigating the effect of MANF on ERS of RT4-D6P2T schwannoma cells with S63del MPZ Mutation. METHODS Experimental grouping: blank control group, blank control + MANF group, lentivirus group, lentivirus + MANF group, S63del MPZ group, S63del MPZ + MANF group. CCK8 and Annexin-FITC/PI were used to detect cell proliferation and apoptosis. JC-1 was used to detect ΔΨm. MANF, GRP78 and CHOP mRNA and protein were detected by using RT-qPCR, western blotting and immunofluorescence. ER-Tracker and mito-tracker were used to observe the morphology of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and mitochondria. RESULTS Cell proliferation decreased (p < 0.001) and apoptosis increased (p < 0.001) in S63del MPZ group; cell proliferation increased (p = 0.005) and apoptosis decreased (p < 0.001) in S63del MPZ + MANF group. ΔΨm decreased (p < 0.001), MANF, GRP78, CHOP, ATF6, P-PERK/PERK, P-IRE1/IRE1, Bax and Caspase3 increased (p < 0.001) and Bcl2 decreased (p < 0.001) in S63del MPZ group. MANF, GRP78, CHOP, ATF6, P-PERK/PERK, P-IRE1/IRE1, Bax and Caspase3 decreased (p < 0.001) and Bcl2 increased (p < 0.001) in S63del MPZ group. CONCLUSIONS ERS occurred in RT4-D6P2T cells with S63del MPZ mutation, and MANF exerted protective effect in RT4-D6P2T cells with S63del MPZ mutation.
Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease (CMT) is a hereditary monogenic peripheral nerve disease. Variants in the gene encoding myelin protein zero (MPZ) lead to CMT, and different variants have different clinical phenotypes. A variant site, namely, c.389A > G (p.Lys130Arg), in the MPZ gene has been found in Chinese people. The pathogenicity of this variant has been clarified through pedigrees, and peripheral blood‐related functional studies have been conducted.
Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease (CMT) is a genetically heterogeneous group of peripheral neuropathies most of which are associated with mutations in four genes including peripheral myelin protein-22 (PMP22), myelin protein zero (MPZ), gap junction protein beta1 (GJB1) and mitofusin2 (MFN2). This current case report describes the clinical and genetic characteristics of a 6-year-old male proband. A physical examination revealed muscular hypotonia. He started walking on his own at 18 months. A nerve conduction study with needle electromyography revealed conduction block. A novel MPZ mutation (c.398C > T, p.Pro133Leu) was revealed in the proband. This mutation was also found in the 32-year-old father of the proband. The father had had deformity of the feet and distal muscle weakness since childhood. The novel p.Pro133Leu pathogenic mutation was responsible for early onset but slowly progressive CMT1B. We assume that this site is an intolerant to change region in the MPZ gene. This variant in the MPZ gene is an important contributor to hereditary neuropathy with reduced nerve conduction velocity in the Russian population. This case highlights the importance of whole exome sequencing for a proper clinical diagnosis of CMT associated with a mutation in the MPZ gene.
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Mutations in myelin protein zero (MPZ) cause inherited peripheral neuropathies, including Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) and Dejerine-Sottas neuropathy. Mutant MPZ proteins have previously been reported to cause CMT via enhanced endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and Schwann cell (SC) death, although the pathological mechanisms have not yet been elucidated. In this study, we generated an in vitro model of rat SCs expressing mutant MPZ (MPZ V169fs or R98C) proteins and validated the increase in cell death and ER stress induced by the overexpression of the MPZ mutants. Using this model, we examined the efficacy of 3 different aminosalicylic acids (ASAs; 4-ASA, sodium 4-ASA and 5-ASA) in alleviating pathological phenotypes. FACS analysis indicated that the number of apoptotic rat SCs, RT4 cells, induced by mutant MPZ overexpression was significantly reduced following treatment with each ASA. In particular, treatment with 4-ASA reduced the levels of ER stress markers in RT4 cells induced by V169fs MPZ mutant overexpression and relieved the retention of V169fs mutant proteins in the ER. Additionally, the level of an apoptotic signal mediator (p-JNK) was only decreased in the RT4 cells expressing R98C MPZ mutant protein following treatment with 4-ASA. Although 4-ASA is known as a free radical scavenger, treatment with 4-ASA in the in vitro model did not moderate the level of reactive oxygen species, which was elevated by the expression of mutant MPZ proteins. On the whole, the findings of this study indicate that treatment with 4-ASA reduced the ER stress and SC death caused by 2 different MPZ mutants and suggest that ASA may be a potential therapeutic agent for CMT.
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EGR2 (early growth response 2) is a crucial transcription factor for the myelination of the peripheral nervous system. Mutations in EGR2 are reported to cause a heterogenous spectrum of peripheral neuropathy with wide variation in both severity and age of onset, including demyelinating and axonal forms of Charcot-Marie Tooth (CMT) neuropathy, Dejerine-Sottas neuropathy (DSN/CMT3), and congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy (CHN/CMT4E). Here we report a sporadic de novo EGR2 variant, c.1232A > G (NM_000399.5), causing a missense p.Asp411Gly substitution and discovered through whole-exome sequencing (WES) of the proband. The resultant phenotype is severe demyelinating DSN with onset at two years of age, confirmed through nerve biopsy and electrophysiological examination. In silico analyses showed that the Asp411 residue is evolutionarily conserved, and the p.Asp411Gly variant was predicted to be deleterious by multiple in silico analyses. A luciferase-based reporter assay confirmed the reduced ability of p.Asp411Gly EGR2 to activate a PMP22 (peripheral myelin protein 22) enhancer element compared to wild-type EGR2. This study adds further support to the heterogeneity of EGR2-related peripheral neuropathies and provides strong functional evidence for the pathogenicity of the p.Asp411Gly EGR2 variant.
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Objective: To compare nerve cross-sectional area (CSA) in children with Dejerine-Sottas disease (DSD) to matched healthy controls. Background: DSD is a genetically heterogenous, severe demyelinating hereditary neuropathy characterised by onset in the first two years of life, hypotonia, delayed motor development, and motor nerve conduction velocities of 12 m/sec or less. Nerve ultrasound findings have not previously been described in this disorder. Methods: This cross-sectional, matched, case-control study evaluated differences in nerve CSA measured by peripheral nerve ultrasound in children with DSD compared to healthy controls. CSA of the median, ulnar, tibial and sural nerves of the dominant upper and lower limb were measured. Clinical features were also evaluated. Results: Five children with DSD (aged between two and 12 years) and five age- and gender-matched controls were enrolled. A genetic diagnosis was made in four children, each with mutations in different genes: PMP22, MPZ, PRX and EGR2. Four children were unable to ambulate independently. When grouped as a whole, there was no significant difference in nerve CSA in children with DSD compared to controls. However, individual analysis comparing each child with DSD with their matched control indicated nerve enlargement in three out of five children. The largest increase (five-fold) in nerve CSA was observed in a child with a heterozygous PMP22 point mutation. Nerve CSA was moderately increased in two children - one with a heterozygous mutation in MPZ, and the other with compound heterozygous mutations in PRX. Conclusions: Changes in nerve CSA in children with DSD differ according to the underlying genetic aetiology and reflect the variable pathobiologic processes at play within each genetic subtype. Nerve ultrasound may assist in the clinical and genetic diagnosis of DSD, complementing the current clinical and neurophysiologic phenotyping of DSD subtypes. Larger studies in DSD cohorts are required to confirm these findings. Disclosure: Dr. Yiu has nothing to disclose. Dr. Hobbelink has nothing to disclose. Dr. Ryan has nothing to disclose.
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Mutations in the Early‐Growth Response 2 (EGR2) gene cause various hereditary neuropathies, including demyelinating Charcot–Marie‐Tooth (CMT) disease type 1D (CMT1D), congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy type 1 (CHN1), Déjerine–Sottas syndrome (DSS), and axonal CMT (CMT2).
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Early onset hereditary motor and sensory neuropathies are rare disorders encompassing congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy with disease onset in the direct post-natal period and Dejerine–Sottas neuropathy starting in infancy. The clinical spectrum, however, reaches beyond the boundaries of these two historically defined disease entities. De novo dominant mutations in PMP22, MPZ and EGR2 are known to be a typical cause of very early onset hereditary neuropathies. In addition, mutations in several other dominant and recessive genes for Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease may lead to similar phenotypes. To estimate mutation frequencies and to gain detailed insights into the genetic and phenotypic heterogeneity of early onset hereditary neuropathies, we selected a heterogeneous cohort of 77 unrelated patients who presented with symptoms of peripheral neuropathy within the first year of life. The majority of these patients were isolated in their family. We performed systematic mutation screening by means of direct sequencing of the coding regions of 11 genes: MFN2, PMP22, MPZ, EGR2, GDAP1, NEFL, FGD4, MTMR2, PRX, SBF2 and SH3TC2. In addition, screening for the Charcot–Marie–Tooth type 1A duplication on chromosome 17p11.2-12 was performed. In 35 patients (45%), mutations were identified. Mutations in MPZ, PMP22 and EGR2 were found most frequently in patients presenting with early hypotonia and breathing difficulties. The recessive genes FGD4, PRX, MTMR2, SBF2, SH3TC2 and GDAP1 were mutated in patients presenting with early foot deformities and variable delay in motor milestones after an uneventful neonatal period. Several patients displaying congenital foot deformities but an otherwise normal early development carried the Charcot–Marie–Tooth type 1A duplication. This study clearly illustrates the genetic heterogeneity underlying hereditary neuropathies with infantile onset.
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The nerve sonographic features of Dejerine‐Sottas disease (DSD) have not previously been described.
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Hereditary demyelinating peripheral neuropathies consist of a heterogeneous group of genetic disorders that includes hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP), Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT), Dejerine-Sottas syndrome (DSS), and congenital hypomyelination (CH). The clinical classification of these neuropathies into discrete categories can sometimes be difficult because there can be both clinical and pathologic variation and overlap between these disorders. We have identified five novel mutations in the myelin protein zero (MPZ) gene, encoding the major structural protein (P0) of peripheral nerve myelin, in patients with either CMT1B, DSS, or CH. This finding suggests that these disorders may not be distinct pathophysiologic entities, but rather represent a spectrum of related "myelinopathies" due to an underlying defect in myelination. Furthermore, we hypothesize the differences in clinical severity seen with mutations in MPZ are related to the type of mutation and its subsequent effect on protein function (i.e., loss of function versus dominant negative).
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Background Mutations in the gene encoding periaxin (PRX) are known to cause autosomal recessive Dejerine-Sottas neuropathy (DSN) or Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 4F. However, there have been no reports describing Korean patients with these mutations. Case Report We examined a Korean DSN patient with an early-onset, slowly progressive, demyelinating neuropathy with prominent sensory involvement. Whole-exome sequencing and subsequent capillary sequencing revealed novel compound heterozygous nonsense mutations (p.R392X and p.R679X) in PRX. One mutation was transmitted from each of the patient's parents. No unaffected family member had both mutations, and the mutations were not found in healthy controls. Conclusions We believe that these novel compound heterozygous nonsense mutations are the underlying cause of DSN. The clinical, electrophysiologic, and pathologic phenotypes in this family were similar to those described previously for patients with PRX mutations. We have identified the first PRX mutation in a Korean patient with DSN.
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We identified a de novo mutation in the peripheral myelin protein (PMP22) gene of a patient with Déjérine‐Sottas neuropathy. Single‐stranded conformation analysis of PCR‐amplified DNA fragments showed an additional fragment for exon 1 in the patient, which was absent in the unaffected parents. Sequence analysis showed a de novo point mutation C85→A that results in an amino acid substitution Hisl2Gln in the first transmembrane domain of PMP22. This provides further evidence that sporadic cases of Déjérine‐Sottas neuropathy can be due to dominant single base substitutions.© 1995 wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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Diseases associated with acquired or genetic defects in members of the chaperoning system (CS) are increasingly found and have been collectively termed chaperonopathies. Illustrative instances of genetic chaperonopathies involve the genes for chaperonins of Groups I (e.g., Heat shock protein 60, Hsp60) and II (e.g., Chaperonin Containing T-Complex polypeptide 1, CCT). Examples of the former are hypomyelinating leukodystrophy 4 (HLD4 or MitCHAP60) and hereditary spastic paraplegia (SPG13). A distal sensory mutilating neuropathy has been linked to a mutation [p.(His147Arg)] in subunit 5 of the CCT5 gene. Here, we describe a new possibly pathogenic variant [p.(Leu224Val)] of the same subunit but with a different phenotype. This yet undescribed disease affects a girl with early onset demyelinating neuropathy and a severe motor disability. By whole exome sequencing (WES), we identified a homozygous CCT5 c.670C>G p.(Leu224Val) variant in the CCT5 gene. In silico 3D-structure analysis and bioinformatics indicated that this variant could undergo abnormal conformation and could be pathogenic. We compared the patient’s clinical, neurophysiological and laboratory data with those from patients carrying p.(His147Arg) in the equatorial domain. Our patient presented signs and symptoms absent in the p.(His147Arg) cases. Molecular dynamics simulation and modelling showed that the Leu224Val mutation that occurs in the CCT5 intermediate domain near the apical domain induces a conformational change in the latter. Noteworthy is the striking difference between the phenotypes putatively linked to mutations in the same CCT subunit but located in different structural domains, offering a unique opportunity for elucidating their distinctive roles in health and disease
Background Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorder of the peripheral nervous system. Biallelic variants in SLC12A6 have been associated with autosomal-recessive hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy with agenesis of the corpus callosum (HMSN/ACC). We identified heterozygous de novo variants in SLC12A6 in three unrelated patients with intermediate CMT. Methods We evaluated the clinical reports and electrophysiological data of three patients carrying de novo variants in SLC12A6 identified by diagnostic trio exome sequencing. For functional characterisation of the identified variants, potassium influx of mutated KCC3 cotransporters was measured in Xenopus oocytes. Results We identified two different de novo missense changes (p.Arg207His and p.Tyr679Cys) in SLC12A6 in three unrelated individuals with early-onset progressive CMT. All presented with axonal/demyelinating sensorimotor neuropathy accompanied by spasticity in one patient. Cognition and brain MRI were normal. Modelling of the mutant KCC3 cotransporter in Xenopus oocytes showed a significant reduction in potassium influx for both changes. Conclusion Our findings expand the genotypic and phenotypic spectrum associated with SLC12A6 variants from autosomal-recessive HMSN/ACC to dominant-acting de novo variants causing a milder clinical presentation with early-onset neuropathy.
Myelination of the peripheral nervous system requires Schwann cells (SC) differentiation into the myelinating phenotype. The peripheral myelin protein-22 (PMP22) is an integral membrane glycoprotein, expressed in SC. It was initially described as a growth arrest-specific (gas3) gene product, up-regulated by serum starvation. PMP22 mutations were pathognomonic for human hereditary peripheral neuropathies, including the Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT). Trembler-J (TrJ) is a heterozygous mouse model carrying the same pmp22 point mutation as a CMT1E variant. Mutations in lamina genes have been related to a type of peripheral (CMT2B1) or central (autosomal dominant leukodystrophy) neuropathy. We explore the presence of PMP22 and Lamin B1 in Wt and TrJ SC nuclei of sciatic nerves and the colocalization of PMP22 concerning the silent heterochromatin (HC: DAPI-dark counterstaining), the transcriptionally active euchromatin (EC), and the nuclear lamina (H3K4m3 and Lamin B1 immunostaining, respectively). The results revealed that the number of TrJ SC nuclei in sciatic nerves was greater, and the SC volumes were smaller than those of Wt. The myelin protein PMP22 and Lamin B1 were detected in Wt and TrJ SC nuclei and predominantly in peripheral nuclear regions. The level of PMP22 was higher, and those of Lamin B1 lower in TrJ than in Wt mice. The level of PMP22 was higher, and those of Lamin B1 lower in TrJ than in Wt mice. PMP22 colocalized more with Lamin B1 and with the transcriptionally competent EC, than the silent HC with differences between Wt and TrJ genotypes. The results are discussed regarding the probable nuclear role of PMP22 and the relationship with TrJ neuropathy.
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Nonconservative point mutations of the peripheral myelin protein 22 (PMP22) are associated with Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1A disease, the most common inherited peripheral neuropathy in humans, and with the Trembler J (TrJ) and Trembler (Tr) alleles in mice. We investigated the intracellular transport of wild-type PMP22 and its TrJ and Tr mutant forms in Schwann cells and in a non-neuronal cell line. In contrast to wild type, mutant proteins were not inserted into the plasma membrane and accumulated in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi compartments. Coexpression of each mutant with wild-type PMP22 confirmed the different intracellular distribution of the mutant forms, indicating that neither the TrJ nor Tr protein has a dominant-negative effect on the cellular distribution of wild-type PMP22. Accumulation of PMP22 immunoreactivity in the cell body of myelinating Schwann cells was also observed in nerve biopsies obtained from CMT1A patients carrying the TrJ point mutation. We propose that impaired trafficking of mutated PMP22 affects Schwann cell physiology leading to myelin instability and loss.
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The presence of protein aggregates in the nervous system is associated with various pathological conditions, yet their contribution to disease mechanisms is poorly understood. One type of aggregate, the aggresome, accumulates misfolded proteins destined for degradation by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. Peripheral myelin protein 22 (PMP22) is a short-lived Schwann cell (SC) protein that forms aggresomes when the proteasome is inhibited or the protein is overexpressed. Duplication, deletion, or point mutations in PMP22 are associated with a host of demyelinating peripheral neuropathies, suggesting that, for normal SC cell function, the levels of PMP22 must be tightly regulated. Therefore, we speculate that mutant, misfolded PMP22 might overload the proteasome and promote aggresome formation. To test this, sciatic nerves of Trembler J (TrJ) neuropathy mice carrying a leucine-to-proline mutation in PMP22 were studied. In TrJ neuropathy nerves, PMP22 has an extended half-life and forms aggresome-like structures that are surrounded by molecular chaperones and lysosomes. On the basis of these characteristics, we hypothesized that PMP22 aggresomes are transitory, linking the proteasomal and lysosomal protein degradation pathways. Here we show that Schwann cells have the ability to eliminate aggresomes by a mechanism that is enhanced when autophagy is activated and is primarily prevented when autophagy is inhibited. This mechanism of aggresome clearance is not unique to peripheral glia, because L fibroblasts were also capable of removing aggresomes. Our results provide evidence for the involvement of the proteasome pathway in TrJ neuropathy and for the role of autophagy in the clearance of aggresomes.
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Point mutations in the peripheral myelin protein 22 (PMP22) gene have been identified to cause demyelinating Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) and hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsy (HNPP). To investigate the mutation spectrum of PMP22 in Han-Chinese population residing in Taiwan, 53 patients with molecularly unassigned demyelinating CMT and 52 patients with HNPP-like neuropathy of unknown genetic causes were screened for PMP22 mutations by Sanger sequencing. Three point mutations were identified in four patients with demyelinating CMT, including c.256 C > T (p.Q86X) in two, and c.310delA (p.I104FfsX7) and c.319 + 1G > A in one each. One PMP22 missense mutation, c.124 T > C (p.C42R), was identified in a patient with HNPP-like neuropathy. The clinical presentations of these mutations vary from mild HNPP-like syndrome to severe infantile-onset demyelinating CMT. In vitro analyses revealed that both PMP22 p.Q86X and p.I104FfsX7 mutations result in truncated PMP22 proteins that are almost totally retained within cytosol, whereas the p.C42R mutation partially impairs cell membrane localization of PMP22 protein. In conclusion, PMP22 point mutations account for 7.5% and 1.9% of demyelinating CMT and HNPP patients with unknown genetic causes, respectively. This study delineates the clinical and molecular features of PMP22 point mutations in Taiwan, and emphasizes their roles in demyelinating CMT or HNPP-like neuropathy.
Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) syndrome is the most common progressive human motor and sensory peripheral neuropathy. CMT type 1E is a demyelinating neuropathy affecting Schwann cells due to peripheral-myelin-protein-22 (PMP22) mutations, modelized by Trembler-J mice. Curcumin, a natural polyphenol compound obtained from turmeric (Curcuma longa), exhibits dose- and time-varying antitumor, antioxidant and neuroprotective properties, however, the neurotherapeutic actions of curcumin remain elusive. Here, we propose curcumin as a possible natural treatment capable of enhancing cellular detoxification mechanisms, resulting in an improvement of the neurodegenerative Trembler-J phenotype. Using a refined method for obtaining enriched Schwann cell cultures, we evaluated the neurotherapeutic action of low dose curcumin treatment on the PMP22 expression, and on the chaperones and autophagy/mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathways in Trembler-J and wild-type genotypes. In wild-type Schwann cells, the action of curcumin resulted in strong stimulation of the chaperone and macroautophagy pathway, whereas the modulation of ribophagy showed a mild effect. However, despite the promising neuroprotective effects for the treatment of neurological diseases, we demonstrate that the action of curcumin in Trembler-J Schwann cells could be impaired due to the irreversible impact of ethanol used as a common curcumin vehicle necessary for administration. These results contribute to expanding our still limited understanding of PMP22 biology in neurobiology and expose the intrinsic lability of the neurodegenerative Trembler-J genotype. Furthermore, they unravel interesting physiological mechanisms of cellular resilience relevant to the pharmacological treatment of the neurodegenerative Tremble J phenotype with curcumin and ethanol. We conclude that the analysis of the effects of the vehicle itself is an essential and inescapable step to comprehensibly assess the effects and full potential of curcumin treatment for therapeutic purposes.
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Endosomal sorting plays a fundamental role in directing neural development. By altering the temporal and spatial distribution of membrane receptors, endosomes regulate signaling pathways that control the differentiation and function of neural cells. Several genes linked to inherited demyelinating peripheral neuropathies, known as Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease, encode proteins that directly interact with components of the endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT). Our previous studies demonstrated that a point mutation in the ESCRT component hepatocyte growth-factor-regulated tyrosine kinase substrate (HGS), an endosomal scaffolding protein that identifies internalized cargo to be sorted by the endosome, causes a peripheral neuropathy in the neurodevelopmentally impaired teetering mice. Here, we constructed a Schwann cell-specific deletion of Hgs to determine the role of endosomal sorting during myelination. Inactivation of HGS in Schwann cells resulted in motor and sensory deficits, slowed nerve conduction velocities, delayed myelination and hypomyelinated axons, all of which occur in demyelinating forms of CMT. Consistent with a delay in Schwann cell maturation, HGS-deficient sciatic nerves displayed increased mRNA levels for several promyelinating genes and decreased mRNA levels for genes that serve as markers of myelinating Schwann cells. Loss of HGS also altered the abundance and activation of the ERBB2/3 receptors, which are essential for Schwann cell development. We therefore hypothesize that HGS plays a critical role in endosomal sorting of the ERBB2/3 receptors during Schwann cell maturation, which further implicates endosomal dysfunction in inherited peripheral neuropathies. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Schwann cells myelinate peripheral axons, and defects in Schwann cell function cause inherited demyelinating peripheral neuropathies known as CMT. Although many CMT-linked mutations are in genes that encode putative endosomal proteins, little is known about the requirements of endosomal sorting during myelination. In this study, we demonstrate that loss of HGS disrupts the endosomal sorting pathway in Schwann cells, resulting in hypomyelination, aberrant myelin sheaths, and impairment of the ERBB2/3 receptor pathway. These findings suggest that defective endosomal trafficking of internalized cell surface receptors may be a common mechanism contributing to demyelinating CMT.
Abnormalities of the peripheral myelin protein 22 (PMP22) gene, including duplication, deletion and point mutations are a major culprit in Type 1 Charcot–Marie–Tooth (CMT) diseases. The complete absence of PMP22 alters cholesterol metabolism in Schwann cells, which likely contributes to myelination deficits. Here, we examined the subcellular trafficking of cholesterol in distinct models of PMP22‐linked neuropathies. In Schwann cells from homozygous Trembler J (TrJ) mice carrying a Leu16Pro mutation, cholesterol was retained with TrJ‐PMP22 in the Golgi, alongside a corresponding reduction in its plasma membrane level. PMP22 overexpression, which models CMT1A caused by gene duplication, triggered cholesterol sequestration to lysosomes, and reduced ATP‐binding cassette transporter‐dependent cholesterol efflux. Conversely, lysosomal targeting of cholesterol by U18666A treatment increased wild type (WT)‐PMP22 levels in lysosomes. Mutagenesis of a cholesterol recognition motif, or CRAC domain, in human PMP22 lead to increased levels of PMP22 in the ER and Golgi compartments, along with higher cytosolic, and lower membrane‐associated cholesterol. Importantly, cholesterol trafficking defects observed in PMP22‐deficient Schwann cells were rescued by WT but not CRAC‐mutant‐PMP22. We also observed that myelination deficits in dorsal root ganglia explants from heterozygous PMP22‐deficient mice were improved by cholesterol supplementation. Collectively, these findings indicate that PMP22 is critical in cholesterol metabolism, and this mechanism is likely a contributing factor in PMP22‐linked hereditary neuropathies. Our results provide a basis for understanding how altered expression of PMP22 impacts cholesterol metabolism.
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Peripheral myelin protein, 22 kDa (PMP22), is a myelin molecule associated with Schwann cells in peripheral nerves (Snipes, G. J., Suter, U., Welcher, A. A., and Shooter, E. M. (1992) J. Cell Biol. 117, 225-238). Mutations affecting the PMP22 gene have been implicated in the trembler mutation in mice (Suter, U., Welcher, A. A., Ozcelik, T., Snipes, G. J., Kosaras, B., Francke, U., Billings-Gagliardi, S., Sidman, R. L., and Shooter, E. M. (1992) Nature 356, 241-244; Suter, U., Moskow, J. J., Welcher, A. A., Snipes, G. J., Kosaras, B., Sidman, R. L., Buchberg, A. M., and Shooter, E. M. (1992) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 89, 4382-4386) and Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease in humans (Patel, P. I., Roa, B. B., Welcher, A. A., Schoener-Scott, R., Trask, B. J., Pentao, L., Snipes, G. J., Garcia, C. A., Francke, U., Shooter, E. M., Lupski, J. R., and Suter, U. (1992) Nature genet. 1, 159-165). In this report, we have studied PMP22 production in cultured rat Schwann cells. Schwann cells contain a 1.8-kilobase mRNA transcript coding for PMP22, and its production is up-regulated in vitro by forskolin. Metabolic labeling combined with immunoprecipitation methods using antibodies raised against synthetic peptides of PMP22 reveal that Schwann cells generate the protein from an 18-kDa precursor form which is post-translationally modified by N-linked glycosylation. A second molecule (molecular mass, 48 kDa) that reacted with PMP22 antibodies was also detected in Schwann cells but is not related chemically to PMP22 as determined by pulse-chase labeling. Metabolic labeling of rat sciatic nerve and Western blot analyses of purified rat sciatic nerve myelin reveal that deglycosylation of PMP22 gives rise to an 18-kDa protein similar in size to that in Schwann cells. These results indicate that cultured Schwann cells may provide a good model in which to investigate the production and function of PMP22 and to establish the cellular basis for the protein's involvement in inherited peripheral neuropathies.
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Mutations in MPZ, the gene encoding myelin protein zero (MPZ), the major protein constituent of peripheral myelin, can cause the adult-onset, inherited neuropathy Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, as well as the more severe, childhood-onset Dejerine-Sottas neuropathy and congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy. Most MPZ-truncating mutations associated with severe forms of peripheral neuropathy result in premature termination codons within the terminal or penultimate exons that are not subject to nonsense-mediated decay and are stably translated into mutant proteins with potential dominant-negative activity. However, some truncating mutations at the 3' end of MPZ escape the nonsense-mediated decay pathway and cause a mild peripheral neuropathy phenotype. We examined the functional properties of MPZ-truncating proteins that escaped nonsense-mediated decay, and we found that frameshift mutations associated with severe disease cause an intracellular accumulation of mutant proteins, primarily within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), which induces apoptosis. Curcumin, a chemical compound derived from the curry spice tumeric, releases the ER-retained MPZ mutants into the cytoplasm accompanied by a lower number of apoptotic cells. Our findings suggest that curcumin treatment is sufficient to relieve the toxic effect of mutant aggregation-induced apoptosis and may potentially have a therapeutic role in treating selected forms of inherited peripheral neuropathies.
Schwann cells myelinate selected axons in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) and contribute to fast saltatory conduction via the formation of compact myelin, in which water is excluded from between tightly adhered lipid bilayers. Peripheral neuropathies, such as Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) and Dejerine-Sottas syndrome (DSS), are incurable demyelinating conditions that result in pain, decrease in muscle mass, and functional impairment. Many Schwann cell proteins, which are directly involved in the stability of compact myelin or its development, are subject to mutations linked to these neuropathies. The most abundant PNS myelin protein is protein zero (P0); point mutations in this transmembrane protein cause CMT subtype 1B and DSS. P0 tethers apposing lipid bilayers together through its extracellular immunoglobulin-like domain. Additionally, P0 contains a cytoplasmic tail (P0ct), which is membrane-associated and contributes to the physical properties of the lipid membrane. Six CMT- and DSS-associated missense mutations have been reported in P0ct. We generated recombinant disease mutant variants of P0ct and characterized them using biophysical methods. Compared to wild-type P0ct, some mutants have negligible differences in function and folding, while others highlight functionally important amino acids within P0ct. For example, the D224Y variant of P0ct induced tight membrane multilayer stacking. Our results show a putative molecular basis for the hypermyelinating phenotype observed in patients with this particular mutation and provide overall information on the effects of disease-linked mutations in a flexible, membrane-binding protein segment.
Mutations in myelin genes cause inherited peripheral neuropathies that range in severity from adult-onset Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1 to childhood-onset Dejerine-Sottas neuropathy and congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy. Many myelin gene mutants that cause severe disease, such as those in the myelin protein zero gene (MPZ) and the peripheral myelin protein 22 gene (PMP22), appear to make aberrant proteins that accumulate primarily within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), resulting in Schwann cell death by apoptosis and, subsequently, peripheral neuropathy. We previously showed that curcumin supplementation could abrogate ER retention and aggregation-induced apoptosis associated with neuropathy-causing MPZ mutants. We now show reduced apoptosis after curcumin treatment of cells in tissue culture that express PMP22 mutants. Furthermore, we demonstrate that oral administration of curcumin partially mitigates the severe neuropathy phenotype of the Trembler-J mouse model in a dose-dependent manner. Administration of curcumin significantly decreases the percentage of apoptotic Schwann cells and results in increased number and size of myelinated axons in sciatic nerves, leading to improved motor performance. Our findings indicate that curcumin treatment is sufficient to relieve the toxic effect of mutant aggregation-induced apoptosis and improves the neuropathologic phenotype in an animal model of human neuropathy, suggesting a potential therapeutic role in selected forms of inherited peripheral neuropathies.
Mutations in the gene of the peripheral myelin protein zero (P0) give rise to the peripheral neuropathies Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1B disease (CMT1B), Déjérine-Sottas syndrome, and congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy. To investigate the pathomechanisms of a specific point mutation in the P0 gene, we generated two independent transgenic mouse lines expressing the pathogenic CMT1B missense mutation Ile106Leu (P0sub) under the control of the P0 promoter on a wild-type background. Both P0sub-transgenic mouse lines showed shivering and ultrastructural abnormalities including retarded myelination, onion bulb formation, and dysmyelination seen as aberrantly folded myelin sheaths and tomacula in all nerve fibers. Functionally, the mutation leads to dispersed compound muscle action potentials and severely reduced conduction velocities. Our observations support the view that the Ile106Leu mutation acts by a dominant-negative gain of function and that the P0sub-transgenic mouse represents an animal model for a severe, tomaculous form of CMT1B.
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Background Hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy, also referred to as Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease (CMT), is most often caused by a duplication of the peripheral myelin protein 22 ( PMP22 ) gene. This duplication causes CMT type 1A (CMT1A). CMT1A rarely occurs in combination with other hereditary neuromuscular disorders. However, such rare genetic coincidences produce a severe phenotype and have been reported in terms of “double trouble” overlapping syndrome. Waardenburg syndrome (WS) is the most common form of a hereditary syndromic deafness. It is primarily characterized by pigmentation anomalies and classified into four major phenotypes. A mutation in the SRY sex determining region Y-box 10 ( SOX10 ) gene causes WS type 2 or 4 and peripheral demyelinating neuropathy, central dysmyelinating leukodystrophy, WS, and Hirschsprung disease. We describe a 11-year-old boy with extreme hypertrophic neuropathy because of a combination of CMT1A and WS type 2. This is the first published case on the co-occurrence of CMT1A and WS type 2. Case presentation The 11-year-old boy presented with motor developmental delay and a deterioration in unstable walking at 6 years of age. In addition, he had congenital hearing loss and heterochromia iridis. The neurological examination revealed weakness in the distal limbs with pes cavus. He was diagnosed with CMT1A by the fluorescence in situ hybridization method. His paternal pedigree had a history of CMT1A. However, no family member had congenital hearing loss. His clinical manifestation was apparently severe than those of his relatives with CMT1A. In addition, a whole-body magnetic resonance neurography revealed an extreme enlargement of his systemic cranial and spinal nerves. Subsequently, a genetic analysis revealed a heterozygous frameshift mutation c.876delT (p.F292Lfs*19) in the SOX10 gene. He was eventually diagnosed with WS type 2. Conclusions We described a patient with a genetically confirmed overlapping diagnoses of CMT1A and WS type 2. The double trouble with the genes created a significant impact on the peripheral nerves system. Severe phenotype in the proband can be attributed to the cumulative effect of mutations in both PMP22 and SOX10 genes, responsible for demyelinating neuropathy.
Abstract Copy number variation (CNV) may lead to pathological traits, and Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1A (CMT1A), the commonest inherited peripheral neuropathy, is due to a genomic duplication encompassing the dosage-sensitive PMP22 gene. MicroRNAs act as repressors on post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression and in rodent models of CMT1A, overexpression of one such microRNA (miR-29a) has been shown to reduce the PMP22 transcript and protein level. Here we present genomic and functional evidence, for the first time in a human CNV-associated phenotype, of the 3′ untranslated region (3′-UTR)-mediated role of microRNA repression on gene expression. The proband of the family presented with an early-onset, severe sensorimotor demyelinating neuropathy and harboured a novel de novo deletion in the PMP22 3′-UTR. The deletion is predicted to include the miR-29a seed binding site and transcript analysis of dermal myelinated nerve fibres using a novel platform, revealed a marked increase in PMP22 transcript levels. Functional evidence from Schwann cell lines harbouring the wild-type and mutant 3′-UTR showed significantly increased reporter assay activity in the latter, which was not ameliorated by overexpression of a miR-29a mimic. This shows the importance of miR-29a in regulating PMP22 expression and opens an avenue for therapeutic drug development.
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Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1A (CMT1A), caused by duplication of the peripheral myelin protein 22 (PMP22) gene, and CMT1B, caused by mutations in myelin protein zero (MPZ) gene, are the two most common forms of demyelinating CMT (CMT1), and no treatments are available for either. Prior studies of the MpzSer63del mouse model of CMT1B have demonstrated that protein misfolding, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) retention and activation of the unfolded protein response (UPR) contributed to the neuropathy. Heterozygous patients with an arginine to cysteine mutation in MPZ (MPZR98C) develop a severe infantile form of CMT1B which is modelled by MpzR98C/ + mice that also show ER stress and an activated UPR. C3-PMP22 mice are considered to effectively model CMT1A. Altered proteostasis, ER stress and activation of the UPR have been demonstrated in mice carrying Pmp22 mutations. To determine whether enabling the ER stress/UPR and readjusting protein homeostasis would effectively treat these models of CMT1B and CMT1A, we administered Sephin1/IFB-088/icerguestat, a UPR modulator which showed efficacy in the MpzS63del model of CMT1B, to heterozygous MpzR98C and C3-PMP22 mice. Mice were analysed by behavioural, neurophysiological, morphological and biochemical measures. Both MpzR98C/ + and C3-PMP22 mice improved in motor function and neurophysiology. Myelination, as demonstrated by g-ratios and myelin thickness, improved in CMT1B and CMT1A mice and markers of UPR activation returned towards wild-type values. Taken together, our results demonstrate the capability of IFB-088 to treat a second mouse model of CMT1B and a mouse model of CMT1A, the most common form of CMT. Given the recent benefits of IFB-088 treatment in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and multiple sclerosis animal models, these data demonstrate its potential in managing UPR and ER stress for multiple mutations in CMT1 as well as in other neurodegenerative diseases. (Left panel) the accumulation of overexpressed PMP22 or misfolded mutant P0 in the Schwann cell endoplasmic reticulum (ER) leads to overwhelming of the degradative capacity, activation of ER-stress mechanisms, and myelination impairment. (Right panel) by prolonging eIF2α phosphorylation, IFB-088 reduces the amount of newly synthesized proteins entering the ER, allowing the protein quality control systems to better cope with the unfolded/misfolded protein and allowing myelination to progress.
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Abstract Charcot–Marie–Tooth's disease (CMT) represents the most common inherited neuropathy. Most patients are diagnosed during late stages of disease course during adulthood. We performed a review of clinical, neurophysiological, and genetic diagnoses of 32 patients with genetically defined childhood-onset demyelinating CMT under clinical follow-up in a Brazilian Center for Neuromuscular Diseases from January 2015 to December 2019. The current mean age was 33.1 ± 18.3 years (ranging from 7 to 71 years) and mean age at defined genetic diagnosis was 36.1 ± 18.3 years. The mean age at onset was 6.1 ± 4.4 years. The most common initial complaint was bilateral pes cavus. The genetic basis included PMP22 duplication (CMT1A) ( n = 18), GJB1 (CMTX1) ( n = 5), MPZ (CMT1B) ( n = 3), FIG4 (CMT4J) ( n = 3), SH3TC2 (CMT4C) ( n = 1), PLEKHG5 (CMTRIC) ( n = 1), and PRX (CMT4F) ( n = 1). Almost all patients ( n = 31) presented with moderate or severe compromise in the CMT neuropathy score 2 with the highest values observed in CMT1B. Medical history disclosed obstructive sleep apnea ( n = 5), aseptic meningitis ( n = 1/ MPZ ), akinetic-rigid parkinsonism ( n = 1/ FIG4 ), and overlapping chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy ( n = 1/ MPZ ). Motor conduction block was detected in three individuals ( PMP22 , FIG4 , MPZ ). Acute denervation occurred in seven patients. Nonuniform demyelinating patterns were seen in four individuals (two CMT1A, one CMT1B, and one CMTX1). Abnormal cerebral white matter findings were detected in CMT1A and CMTX1, while hypertrophic roots were seen in CMT1A, CMT1B, and CMTX1. Our study emphasizes a relative oligogenic basis in childhood-onset demyelinating CMT and atypical findings may be observed especially in MPZ , PMP22 , and GJB1 gene variants.
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To date, 12 cases of heterozygous Ser72Leu mutations in the peripheral myelin protein 22 have been reported in patients suffering from severe demyelinating form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT1) and congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy (CHN) [MIM# 605253]. In the present study we report two cases of de novo S72L mutations in the PMP22 gene detected in patients of Polish origin suffering from CMT1 disease.
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Hereditary disorders of the peripheral nerves constitute a group of frequently encountered neurological diseases. Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy type 1 (CMT1) is genetically heterogeneous and characterized by demyelination with moderately to severely reduced nerve conduction velocities, absent muscle stretch reflexes and onion bulb formation. Genetic loci for CMT1 map to chromosome 17 (CMT1A), chromosome 1 (CMT1B), and another unknown autosome (CMT1C). CMT1A is most often associated with a tandem 1.5-megabase (Mb) duplication in chromosome 17p11.2-12, or in rare patients may result from a point mutation in the peripheral myelin protein-22 (PMP22) gene. CMT1 B result from point mutations in the myelin protein zero (Po or MPZ) gene. The molecular defect in CMT1 C is unknown. Mutations in the early growth response 2 gene (EGR2) are also associated with demyelinating neuropathy. Other rare forms of demyelinating peripheral neuropathies map to chromosome 8q, 10q, and 11q. X-linked Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy (CMTX), which has clinical features similar to CMT1, is associated with mutations in the connexin32 gene. Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy type 2 (CMT2) is characterized by normal or mildly reduced nerve conduction velocity with decreased amplitude and axonal loss without hypertrophic features. One form of CMT2 maps to chromosome 1 p36 (CMT2A), another to chromosome 3p (CMT2B) and another to 7p (CMT2D). Dejerine-Sottas disease (DSD), also called hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type III (HMSNIII), is a severe, infantile-onset demyelinating polyneuropathy that may be associated with point mutations in either the PMP22 gene or the Po gene and shares considerable clinical and pathological features with CMT1. Hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP) is an autosomal dominant disorder that results in a recurrent, episodic demyelinating neuropathy. HNPP is associated with a 1.5-Mb deletion in chromosome 17p11.2-12 and results from reduced expression of the PMP22 gene. CMT1A and HNPP are reciprocal duplication/deletion syndromes originating from unequal crossover during germ cell meiosis.
We studied a 33-year-old woman with a negative family history. Both of her parents were examined clinically by nerve conduction velocities (NCVs) and EMG, with normal results. The clinical onset of her condition was at 24 months, with severe weakness and atrophy of her feet and hands, but the proximal muscles were relatively spared. She had bilateral pes cavus, distal weakness and hypesthesia for touch and proprioception, areflexia, claw hands, and severe thoracolumbar kyphoscoliosis. NCVs showed absent motor and sensory responses and EMG revealed diffuse fibrillation potentials. Molecular genetic studies indicated a de novo dominant missense point mutation of exon 3 of the peripheral myelin protein 22 gene at nucleotide 264 that caused the replacement of serine with leucine.
Currently more than 30 genes are known to be responsible for genetically determined neuropathies. Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease is the most frequent of these hereditary neuropathies, with a prevalence of 4.7 to 36 per 100 000. In its demyelinating forms (CMT1), approximately 70% of cases are associated with a duplication of the PMP22gene. In its axonal forms (CMT2), 10-20% of the cases may be associated with a mutation of the MFN2gene. For North African patients with recessive transmission, a mutation of the LMNA gene must be sought. It is essential to stress the great variability of the phenotype--clinical, electrophysiological, and histologic--between and within families. A detailed analysis of these criteria, together with consideration of ethnic origin, may guide the search for the causal mutation. Whether the case involves certainly hereditary transmission or a sporadic form, it is desirable to be able to examine the maximum number of the patient's kin, both clinically and electrophysiologically. The forms with recessive transmission usually have a very early onset and are more serious than the dominant forms. The early- and very early-onset forms of CMT are increasingly better distinguished: congenital hypomyelination neuropathy (mutations of PMP22, MPZ or EGR2), or more axonal forms, including SMARD1 (Spinal muscle atrophy with respiratory distress; mutations of IGHMBP2) and EOHMSN (Early-onset hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy; mutations of MFN2). The prevention of cutaneous (ulcerations), bone, and amputation complications is very important in patients with hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathies, because of the severity of the sensory disorders.
We studied a 25-year-old black woman with healthy parents and her 2-year, 11-month-old son. Her motor development was delayed and she started to walk with support when she was 6 years old. She never walked independently and had always used a wheelchair. Neurological evaluation showed severe weakness and atrophy of her feet, legs, and hands, bilateral pes cavus and hammertoes, corrected scoliosis, hypesthesia for proprioception and vibration sense in both feet and ankles, and areflexia. She had normal intelligence. Her son also had delayed motor milestones and was still unable to stand and walk independently at almost 3 years. Neurological evaluation revealed diffuse muscle hypotonia and weakness with generalized areflexia and normal intelligence. No muscle atrophies or feet deformities were noticed. Nerve conduction velocities showed significant slowing (less than 5 m/s) with prolonged distal latencies (above 30 ms). Compound motor action potential amplitudes were markedly reduced. Electromyography revealed polyphasic motor unit potentials. Molecular genetic studies indicated a Trembler type missense point mutation of exon 4 of the peripheral myelin protein 22 gene that led to the substitution of a spartic acid for glycine in both the mother and her son. Her parents showed normal DNA studies.
Inherited disorders of peripheral nerves represent a common group of neurologic diseases. Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy type 1 (CMT1) is a genetically heterogeneous group of chronic demyelinating polyneuropathies with loci mapping to chromosome 17 (CMT1A), chromosome 1 (CMT1B) and to another unknown autosome (CMT1C). CMT1A is most often associated with a tandem 1.5-megabase (Mb) duplication in chromosome 17p11.2-12, or in rare patients may result from a point mutation in the peripheral myelin protein-22 (PMP22) gene. CMT1B is associated with point mutations in the myelin protein zero (P0 or MPZ) gene. The molecular defect in CMT1C is unknown. X-linked Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy (CMTX), which has clinical features similar to CMT1, is associated with mutations in the connexin32 gene. Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy type 2 (CMT2) is an axonal neuropathy, also of undetermined cause. Forms of CMT2 map to chromosome 1p36 (CMT2A), chromosome 3p (CMT2B), chromosome 7p (CMT2D), and to chromosome 8p21 (CMT2E). Dejerine-Sottas disease (DSD), also called hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type III (HMSNIII), is a severe, infantile-onset, demyelinating polyneuropathy syndrome that may be associated with point mutations in either the PMP22 gene or the P0 gene and shares considerable clinical and pathologic features with CMT1. Hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP) is an autosomal dominant disorder that results in a recurrent, episodic demyelinating neuropathy. HNPP is associated with a 1.5-Mb deletion in chromosome 17p11.2-12 and results from reduced expression of the PMP22 gene. CMT1A and HNPP are reciprocal duplication/deletion syndromes originating from unequal crossover during germ cell meiosis. Other rare forms of demyelinating peripheral neuropathies map to chromosomes 8q, 10q, and 11q. Hereditary neuralgic amyotrophy (familial brachial plexus neuropathy) is an autosomal dominant disorder causing painful, recurrent brachial plexopathies and maps to chromosome 17q25.
Charcot-Marie-Tooth diseases (CMT) are due to abnormalities of many genes, the most frequent being linked to PMP22 (Peripheral Myelin Protein 22). In the past, only spontaneous genetic anomalies occurring in mouse mutants such as Trembler (Tr) mice were available; more recently, several rodent models have been generated for exploration of the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying these neuropathies. Based on the personal experience of our team, we describe here the pathological hallmarks of most of these animal models and compare them to the pathological features observed in some CMT patient nerves (CMT types 1A and E; hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies, HNPP). We describe clinical data and detailed pathological analysis mainly by electron microscopy of the sciatic nerves of these animal models conducted in our laboratory; lesions of PMP22 deficient animals (KO and mutated PMP22) and PMP22 overexpressed models are described and compared to ultrastructural anomalies of nerve biopsies from CMT patients due to PMP22 gene anomalies. It is of note that while there are some similarities, there are also significant differences between the lesions in animal models and human cases. Such observations highlight the complex roles played by PMP22 in nerve development. It should be borne in mind that we require additional correlations between animal models of hereditary neuropathies and CMT patients to rationalize the development of efficient drugs.
Myelin protein zero (MPZ) is a member of the immunoglobulin gene superfamily with single extracellular, transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains. Homotypic interactions between extracellular domains of MPZ adhere adjacent myelin wraps to each other. MPZ is also necessary for myelin compaction since mice which lack MPZ develop severe dysmyelinating neuropathies in which compaction is dramatically disrupted. MPZ mutations in humans cause the inherited demyelinating neuropathy CMT1B. Some mutations cause the severe neuropathies of infancy designated as Dejerine-Sottas disease, while others cause a 'classical' Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease Type 1B (CMT1B) phenotype with normal early milestones but development of disability during the first two decades of life. Still other mutations cause a neuropathy that presents in adults, with normal nerve conduction velocities, designated as a 'CMT2' form of CMT1B. To correlate the phenotype of patients with MPZ mutations with their genotype, we identified and evaluated 13 patients from 12 different families with eight different MPZ mutations. In addition, we re-analysed the clinical data from 64 cases of CMT1B from the literature. Contrary to our expectations, we found that most patients presented with either an early onset neuropathy with signs and symptoms prior to the onset of walking or a late onset neuropathy with signs and symptoms at around age 40 years. Only occasional patients presented with a 'classical' CMT phenotype. Correlation of specific MPZ mutations with their phenotypes demonstrated that addition of either a charged amino acid or altering a cysteine residue in the extracellular domain caused a severe early onset neuropathy. Severe neuropathy was also caused by truncation of the cytoplasmic domain or alteration of an evolutionarily conserved amino acid. Taken together, these data suggest that early onset neuropathy is caused by MPZ mutations that significantly disrupt the tertiary structure of MPZ and thus interfere with MPZ-mediated adhesion and myelin compaction. In contrast, late onset neuropathy is caused by mutations that more subtly alter myelin structure and which probably disrupt Schwann cell-axonal interactions.
Three genes commonly causing Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) encode myelin-related proteins: peripheral myelin protein 22 (PMP22), myelin protein zero (MPZ) and connexin 32 (Cx32). Demyelinating versus axonal phenotypes are major issues in CMT associated with mutations of these genes. We electrophysiologically, pathologically and genetically evaluated demyelinating and axonal features of 205 Japanese patients with PMP22 duplication, MPZ mutations or Cx32 mutations. PMP22 duplication caused mainly demyelinating phenotypes with slowed motor nerve conduction velocity (MCV) and demyelinating histopathology, while axonal features were variably present. Two distinctive phenotypic subgroups were present in patients with MPZ mutations: one showed preserved MCV and exclusively axonal pathological features, while the other was exclusively demyelinating. These axonal and demyelinating phenotypes were well concordant among siblings in individual families, and MPZ mutations did not overlap among these two subgroups, suggesting that the nature and position of the MPZ mutations mainly determine the axonal and demyelinating phenotypes. Patients with Cx32 mutations showed intermediate slowing of MCV, predominantly axonal features and relatively mild demyelinating pathology. These axonal and demyelinating features were present concomitantly in individual patients to a variable extent. The relative severity of axonal and demyelinating features was not associated with particular Cx32 mutations. Median nerve MCV and overall histopathological phenotype changed little with disease advancement. Axonal features of diminished amplitudes of compound muscle action potentials (CMAPs), axonal loss, axonal sprouting and neuropathic muscle wasting all changed as disease advanced, especially in PMP22 duplication and Cx32 mutations. Median nerve MCVs were well maintained independently of age, disease duration and the severity of clinical and pathological abnormalities, confirming that median nerve MCV is an excellent marker for the genetically determined neuropathic phenotypes. Amplitude of CMAPs was correlated significantly with distal muscle strength in PMP22 duplication, MPZ mutations and Cx32 mutations, while MCV slowing was not, indicating that clinical weakness results from reduced numbers of functional large axons, not from demyelination. Thus, the three major myelin-related protein mutations induced varied degrees of axonal and demyelinating phenotypic features according to the specific gene mutation as well as the stage of disease advancement, while clinically evident muscle wasting was attributable to loss of functioning large axons.
Mutations in myelin protein zero (MPZ) are generally associated with Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1B (CMT1B) disease, one of the most common forms of demyelinating neuropathy. Pathogenesis of some MPZ mutants, such as S63del and R98C, involves the misfolding and retention of MPZ in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of myelinating Schwann cells. To cope with proteotoxic ER stress, Schwann cells mount an unfolded protein response (UPR) characterized by activation of the PERK, ATF6 and IRE1α/XBP1 pathways. Previous results showed that targeting the PERK UPR pathway mitigates neuropathy in mouse models of CMT1B; however, the contributions of other UPR pathways in disease pathogenesis remain poorly understood. Here, we probe the importance of IRE1α/XBP1 signalling during normal myelination and in CMT1B. In response to ER stress, IRE1α is activated to stimulate the non-canonical splicing of Xbp1 mRNA to generate spliced Xbp1 (Xbp1s). This results in the increased expression of the adaptive transcription factor XBP1s, which regulates the expression of genes involved in diverse pathways, including ER proteostasis. We generated mouse models in which Xbp1 is deleted specifically in Schwann cells, preventing XBP1s activation in these cells. We observed that Xbp1 is dispensable for normal developmental myelination, myelin maintenance and remyelination after injury. However, Xbp1 deletion dramatically worsens the hypomyelination and the electrophysiological and locomotor parameters observed in young and adult CMT1B neuropathic animals. RNA-sequencing analysis suggested that XBP1s exerts its adaptive function in CMT1B mouse models in large part via the induction of ER proteostasis genes. Accordingly, the exacerbation of the neuropathy in Xbp1-deficient mice was accompanied by upregulation of ER-stress pathways and of regulated IRE1α-dependent mRNA decay signalling in Schwann cells, suggesting that the activation of XBP1s via IRE1α plays a crucial role in limiting mutant protein toxicity and that this toxicity cannot be compensated by other stress responses. Schwann cell-specific overexpression of XBP1s partly re-established Schwann cell proteostasis and attenuated CMT1B severity in both the S63del and R98C mouse models. In addition, the selective, pharmacological activation of IRE1α/XBP1 signalling ameliorated myelination in S63del dorsal root ganglia explants. Collectively, these data show that XBP1 has an essential adaptive role in different models of proteotoxic CMT1B neuropathy and suggest that activation of the IRE1α/XBP1 pathway might represent a therapeutic avenue in CMT1B and, possibly, for other neuropathies characterized by UPR activation.
Myelin protein zero (MPZ/P0) is a major structural protein of peripheral nerve myelin. Disease-associated variants in the MPZ gene cause a wide phenotypic spectrum of inherited peripheral neuropathies. Previous nerve biopsy studies showed evidence for subtype-specific morphological features. Here, we aimed at enhancing the understanding of these subtype-specific features and pathophysiological aspects of MPZ neuropathies. We examined archival material from two Central European centers and systematically determined genetic, clinical, and neuropathological features of 21 patients with MPZ mutations compared to 16 controls. Cases were grouped based on nerve conduction data into congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy (CHN; n = 2), demyelinating Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT type 1; n = 11), intermediate (CMTi; n = 3), and axonal CMT (type 2; n = 5). Six cases had combined muscle and nerve biopsies and one underwent autopsy. We detected four MPZ gene variants not previously described in patients with neuropathy. Light and electron microscopy of nerve biopsies confirmed fewer myelinated fibers, more onion bulbs and reduced regeneration in demyelinating CMT1 compared to CMT2/CMTi. In addition, we observed significantly more denervated Schwann cells, more collagen pockets, fewer unmyelinated axons per Schwann cell unit and a higher density of Schwann cell nuclei in CMT1 compared to CMT2/CMTi. CHN was characterized by basal lamina onion bulb formation, a further increase in Schwann cell density and hypomyelination. Most late onset axonal neuropathy patients showed microangiopathy. In the autopsy case, we observed prominent neuromatous hyperinnervation of the spinal meninges. In four of the six muscle biopsies, we found marked structural mitochondrial abnormalities. These results show that MPZ alterations not only affect myelinated nerve fibers, leading to either primarily demyelinating or axonal changes, but also affect non-myelinated nerve fibers. The autopsy case offers insight into spinal nerve root pathology in MPZ neuropathy. Finally, our data suggest a peculiar association of MPZ mutations with mitochondrial alterations in muscle.
We previously reported familial cases characterized by Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) phenotype with abnormal myelin foldings and MPZ Ile62Phe mutation. To further clarify the molecular mechanisms in this family, we produced wild-type MPZ, Ile62Phe mutant and other mutations in the neighboring regions producing thin myelin sheaths (Ser63del, Ser63Cys and Ser63Phe) by site-specific mutagenesis and transfected these into rat pheochromocytoma cells (PC12). We investigated the expression and aggregation properties of the MPZ protein through immunoblotting, immunohistochemical staining and adhesion assay. MPZ protein with Ile62Phe mutation was immunohistochemically detectable mainly in the plasma membrane of the cells, and it induced a cell aggregation behavior different from the other mutations or the wild-type MPZ. These studies suggested that MPZ Ile62Phe mutation in CMT1B with abnormal myelin folding induced dysregulation of adhesion function of the MPZ protein in a manner unlike those seen in cells with other mutations. The present study provides evidence that the site and nature of amino acid substitutions in the MPZ protein are closely related to the abnormal myelination in CMT1B.
The myelin protein zero gene (MPZ) maps to chromosome 1q22-q23 and encodes the most abundant peripheral nerve myelin protein. The Po protein functions as a homophilic adhesion molecule in myelin compaction. Mutations in the MPZ gene are associated with the demyelinating peripheral neuropathies Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1B (CMT1B), and the more severe Dejerine-Sottas syndrome (DSS). We have surveyed a cohort of 70 unrelated patients with demyelinating polyneuropathy for additional mutations in the MPZ gene. The 1.5-Mb DNA duplication on chromosome 17p11.2-p12 associated with CMT type 1A (CMT1A) was not present. By DNA heteroduplex analysis, four base mismatches were detected in three exons of MPZ. Nucleotide sequence analysis identified a de novo mutation in MPZ exon 3 that predicts an Ile(135)Thr substitution in a family with clinically severe early-onset CMT1, and an exon 3 mutation encoding a Gly(137)Ser substitution was identified in a second CMT1 family. Each predicted amino acid substitution resides in the extracellular domain of the Po protein. Heteroduplex analysis did not detect either base change in 104 unrelated controls, indicating that these substitutions are disease-associated mutations rather than common polymorphisms. In addition, two polymorphic mutations were identified in MPZ exon 5 and exon 6, which do not alter the codons for Gly(200) and Ser(228), respectively. These observations provide further confirmation of the role of MPZ in CMT1B and suggest that MPZ coding region mutations may account for a limited percentage of disease-causing mutations in nonduplication CMT1 patients.
Mutations in the myelin protein zero (MPZ) gene have been associated with different Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) phenotypes, including classical demyelinating CMT1B and the axonal form of the disease (CMT2). The MPZ role in the pathogenesis of both demyelinating and axonal inherited neuropathies was evaluated in the Italian population by screening a cohort of 214 patients with CMT1 or CMT2. A MPZ mutation frequency of 7.9% in demyelinating cases and of 4.8% in axonal cases was observed. In the total cohort (264 patients), including those with mutations in other genes, a mutation frequency of 5.8% (7/121) in demyelinating cases and 4.2% (6/143) in axonal cases was found. Three novel MPZ mutations, two missense (p.Ser111Cys, p.Thr124Ala) and one frameshift (p.Tyr145fs) were found, and a molecular modelling approach was used to test the effects of these mutations on the protein structure. Electrostatic distribution changes within the protein, caused by the amino acid substitution, fit in with phenotypes presented by patients herein described. Our findings suggest that the clinical features associated with MPZ mutations depend partly on the nature of amino acid change and that molecular modelling may provide useful support, based on effects on secondary and tertiary protein structure, to predict the phenotype associated with MPZ mutations.
No abstract
Inherited disorders of peripheral nerves represent a common group of neurologic diseases. Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy type 1 (CMT1) is a genetically heterogeneous group of chronic demyelinating polyneuropathies with loci mapping to chromosome 17 (CMT1A), chromosome 1 (CMT1B), chromosome 16 (CMT1C) and chromosome 10 (CMT1D). CMT1A is most often associated with a tandem 1.5-megabase (Mb) duplication in chromosome 17p11.2-p12. In rare patients it may result from a point mutation in the peripheral myelin protein-22 (PMP22) gene. CMT1B is associated with point mutations in the myelin protein zero (Po or MPZ) gene. Mutations in the SIMPLE gene cause CMT1C, and CMT1D is the result of mutations in the early response 2 (ERG2 or Krox-20) gene. An X-linked form of CMT1 (CMT1X) maps to Xq13 and is associated with mutations in the connexin32 (Cx32) gene. Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy type 2 (CMT2) is an axonal neuropathy that maps to chromosome 1p35-p36 (CMT2A), chromosome 3q13-q22 (CMT2B), chromosome 7p14 (CMT2D), chromosome 8p21 (CMT2E), chromosome 1q22-q23 (CMT2F) or chromosome 3q13 (CMT2G). Two X-linked forms of CMT2 have been reported (CMT2XA and CMT2XB), but the genes remain unidentified. An area that has recently expanded is the identification of autosomal recessive forms of CMT type 1 and 2. Of the eight recessive forms of CMT1 that have been identified to date, only two have been fully characterized at the molecular level (CMT1 AR B 1 and CMT1 AR D). Point mutations were found in the myotubularin-related protein-2 (MTM2) gene for CMT1 AR B1. CMT1 AR D is the result of point mutations in the N-myc downstream-regulated gene 1 (NDRG1). Dejerine-Sottas disease (DSD), also called hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type III (HMSNIII), is a severe, infantile-onset demyelinating polyneuropathy syndrome that may be associated with point mutations in either the PMP22 gene, PO gene, EGR2 gene or the PRX gene (for the recessive form). It shares considerable clinical and pathological features with CMT1. Hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP) is an autosomal dominant disorder that results in a recurrent, episodic demyelinating neuropathy. HNPP is associated with a 1.5-Mb deletion in chromosome 17p11.2-p12 that results in reduced expression of the PMP22 gene. CMT1A and HNPP are reciprocal duplication/deletion syndromes that originate from unequal crossover during germ cell meiosis. Other rare forms of demyelinating peripheral neuropathies map to chromosome 8q, 10q and 11q.
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of disorders and is the most common inherited neuromuscular disorder, with an estimated overall prevalence of 17-40/10,000. Although there has been major advances in the understanding of the genetic basis of CMT in recent years, the most useful classification is still a neurophysiological classification that divides CMT into type 1 (demyelinating; median motor conduction velocity < 38 m/s) and type 2 (axonal; median motor conduction velocity > 38 m/s). An intermediate type is also increasingly being described. Inheritance can be autosomal-dominant (AD), X-linked, or autosomal-recessive (AR). AD CMT1 is the most common type of CMT and was the first form of CMT in which a causative gene was described. This review provides an up-to-date overview of AD CMT1 concentrating on the molecular genetics as the clinical, neurophysiological, and pathological features have been covered elsewhere. Four genes (PMP22, MPZ, LITAF, and EGR2) have been described in the last 15 yr associated with AD CMTI and a further gene (NEFL), originally described as causing AD CMT2 can also cause AD CMT1 (by neurophysiological criteria). Studies have shown many of these genes, when mutated, can cause a wide range of CMT phenotypes from the relatively mild CMT1 to the more severe Dejerine-Sottas disease and congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy, and even in some cases axonal CMT2. This review discusses what is known about these genes and in particular how they cause a peripheral neuropathy, when mutated.
The peripheral myelin protein 22 gene (PMP22), the myelin protein zero gene (MPZ, P0), and the connexin 32 gene (Cx32, GJB1) code for membrane proteins expressed in Schwann cells of the peripheral nervous system (PNS). The early growth response 2 gene (EGR2) encodes a transcription factor that may control myelination in the PNS. Mutations in the respective genes, located on human chromosomes 17p11.2, 1q22-q23, Xq13.1, and 10q21.1-q22.1, are associated with several inherited peripheral neuropathies. To date, a genetic defect in one of these genes has been identified in over 1,000 unrelated patients manifesting a wide range of phenotypes, i.e., Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1 (CMT1) and type 2 (CMT2), Dejerine-Sottas syndrome (DSS), hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP), and congenital hypomyelination (CH). This large number of genetically defined patients provides an exceptional opportunity to examine the correlation between phenotype and genotype.
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) is the most common inherited disorder of the peripheral nervous system. The frequency of different CMT genotypes has been estimated in clinic populations, but prevalence data from the general population is lacking. Point mutations in the mitofusin 2 (MFN2) gene has been identified exclusively in Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 2 (CMT2), and in a single family with intermediate CMT. MFN2 point mutations are probably the most common cause of CMT2. The CMT phenotype caused by mutation in the myelin protein zero (MPZ) gene varies considerably, from early onset and severe forms to late onset and milder forms. The mechanism is not well understood. The myelin protein zero (P(0) ) mediates adhesion in the spiral wraps of the Schwann cell's myelin sheath. X-linked Charcot-Marie Tooth disease (CMTX) is caused by mutations in the connexin32 (cx32) gene that encodes a polypeptide which is arranged in hexameric array and form gap junctions. Estimate prevalence of CMT. Estimate frequency of Peripheral Myelin Protein 22 (PMP22) duplication and point mutations, insertions and deletions in Cx32, Early growth response 2 (EGR2), MFN2, MPZ, PMP22 and Small integral membrane protein of lysosome/late endosome (SIMPLE) genes. Description of novel mutations in Cx32, MFN2 and MPZ. Description of de novo mutations in MFN2. Our population based genetic epidemiological survey included persons with CMT residing in eastern Akershus County, Norway. The participants were interviewed and examined by one geneticist/neurologist, and classified clinically, neurophysiologically and genetically. Two-hundred and thirty-two consecutive unselected and unrelated CMT families with available DNA from all regions in Norway were included in the MFN2 study. We screened for point mutations in the MFN2 gene. We describe four novel mutations, two in the connexin32 gene and two in the MPZ gene. A total of 245 affected from 116 CMT families from the general population of eastern Akershus county were included in the genetic epidemiological survey. In the general population 1 per 1214 persons (95% CI 1062-1366) has CMT. Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1 (CMT1), CMT2 and intermediate CMT were found in 48.2%, 49.4% and 2.4% of the families, respectively. A mutation in the investigated genes was found in 27.2% of the CMT families and in 28.6% of the affected. The prevalence of the PMP22 duplication and mutations in the Cx32, MPZ and MFN2 genes was found in 13.6%, 6.2%, 1.2%, 6.2% of the families, and in 19.6%, 4.8%, 1.1%, 3.2% of the affected, respectively. None of the families had point mutations, insertions or deletions in the EGR2, PMP22 or SIMPLE genes. Four known and three novel mitofusin 2 (MFN2) point mutations in 8 unrelated Norwegian CMT families were identified. The novel point mutations were not found in 100 healthy controls. This corresponds to 3.4% (8/232) of CMT families having point mutations in MFN2. The phenotypes were compatible with CMT1 in two families, CMT2 in four families, intermediate CMT in one family and distal hereditary motor neuronopathy (dHMN) in one family. A point mutation in the MFN2 gene was found in 2.3% of CMT1, 5.5% of CMT2, 12.5% of intermediate CMT and 6.7% of dHMN families. Two novel missense mutations in the MPZ gene were identified. Family 1 had a c.368G>A (Gly123Asp) transition while family 2 and 3 had a c.103G>A (Asp35Asn) transition. The affected in family 1 had early onset and severe symptoms compatible with Dejerine-Sottas syndrome (DSS), while affected in family 2 and 3 had late onset, milder symptoms and axonal neuropathy compatible with CMT2. Two novel connexin32 mutations that cause early onset X-linked CMT were identified. Family 1 had a deletion c.225delG (R75fsX83) which causes a frameshift and premature stop codon at position 247 while family 2 had a c.536G>A (Cys179Tyr) transition which causes a change of the highly conserved cysteine residue, i.e. disruption of at least one of three disulfide bridges. The mean age at onset was in the first decade and the nerve conduction velocities were in the intermediate range. Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease is the most common inherited neuropathy. At present 47 hereditary neuropathy genes are known, and an examination of all known genes would probably only identify mutations in approximately 50% of those with CMT. Thus, it is likely that at least 30-50 CMT genes are yet to be identified. The identified known and novel point mutations in the MFN2 gene expand the clinical spectrum from CMT2 and intermediate CMT to also include possibly CMT1 and the dHMN phenotypes. Thus, genetic analyses of the MFN2 gene should not be restricted to persons with CMT2. The phenotypic variation caused by different missense mutations in the MPZ gene is likely caused by different conformational changes of the MPZ protein which affects the functional tetramers. Severe changes of the MPZ protein cause dysfunctional tetramers and predominantly uncompacted myelin, i.e. the severe phenotypes congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy and DSS, while milder changes cause the phenotypes CMT1 and CMT2. The two novel mutations in the connexin32 gene are more severe than the majority of previously described mutations possibly due to the severe structural change of the gap junction they encode. Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease is the most common inherited disorder of the peripheral nervous system with an estimated prevalence of 1 in 1214. CMT1 and CMT2 are equally frequent in the general population. The prevalence of PMP22 duplication and of mutations in Cx32, MPZ and MFN2 is 19.6%, 4.8%, 1.1% and 3.2%, respectively. The ratio of probable de novo mutations in CMT families was estimated to be 22.7%. Genotype- phenotype correlations for seven novel mutations in the genes Cx32 (2), MFN2 (3) and MPZ (2) are described. Two novel phenotypes were ascribed to the MFN2 gene, however further studies are needed to confirm that MFN2 mutations can cause CMT1 and dHMN.
Schwann cells, the myelinating cells of the peripheral nervous system, are derived from the neural crest. Once neural crest cells are committed to the Schwann cell fate, they can take on one of two phenotypes to become myelinating or nonmyelinating Schwann cells, a decision that is determined by interactions with axons. The critical step in the differentiation of myelinating Schwann cells is the establishment of a one-to-one relationship with axons, the so-called "promyelinating" stage of Schwann cell development. The transition from the promyelinating to the myelinating stage of development is then accompanied by a number of significant changes in the pattern of gene expression, including the activation of a set of genes encoding myelin structural proteins and lipid biosynthetic enzymes, and the inactivation of a set of genes expressed only in immature or nonmyelinating Schwann cells. These changes are regulated mainly at the transcriptional level and also require continuous interaction between Schwann cells and their axons. Two transcription factors, Krox 20 (EGR2) and Oct 6 (SCIP/Tst1), are necessary for the transition from the promyelinating to the myelinating stage of Schwann cell development. Krox 20, expressed in myelinating but not promyelinating Schwann cells, is absolutely required for this transition, and myelination cannot occur in its absence. Oct 6, expressed mainly in promyelinating Schwann cells and then down-regulated before myelination, is necessary for the correct timing of this transition, since myelination is delayed in its absence. Neither Krox 20 nor Oct 6, however, is required for the initial activation of myelin gene expression. Although the mechanisms of Krox 20 and Oct 6 action during myelination are not known, mutation in Krox 20 has been shown to cause CMT1, further implicating this protein in the pathogenesis of this disease. Identifying the molecular mechanisms of Krox 20 and Oct 6 action will thus be important both for understanding myelination and for designing future treatments for CMT1. Point mutlations in the genes encoding the myelin proteins PMP22 and P0 cause CMT1A without a gene duplication and CMT1B, respectively. Although the clinical and pathological phenotypes of CMT1A and CMT1B are similar, their molecular pathogenesis is quite different. Point mutations in PMP22 alter the trafficking of the protein, so that it accumulates in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and intermediate compartment (IC). Mutant PMP22 also sequesters its normal counterpart in the ER, further reducing the amount of PMP22 available for myelin synthesis at the membrane, and accounting, at least in part, for its severe effect on myelination. Mutant PMP22 probably also activates an ER-to-nucleus signal transduction pathway associated with misfolded proteins, which may account for the decrease of myelin gene expression in Schwann cells in Trembler mutant mice. In contrast, absence of expression of the homotypic adhesion molecule, P0, in mice in which the gene has been inactivated, produces a unique pattern of Schwann cell gene expression, demonstrating that P0 plays a regulatory as well as a structural role in myelination. Whether this role is direct, through a P0-mediated adhesion pathway, or indirect, through adhesion pathways mediated by cadherins or integrins, however, remains to be determined. The molecular mechanisms underlying dysmyelination in CMT1 are thus complex, with pleitropic effects on Schwann cell physiology that are determined both by the type of mutation and the protein mutated. Identifying these molecular mechanisms, however, are important both for understanding myelination and for designing future treatments for CMT1. Although demyelination is the hallmark of CMT1, the clinical signs and symptoms of this disease are probably produced by axonal degeneration, not demyelination. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
The peripheral myelin protein 22 (PMP22) and the epithelial membrane proteins (EMP-1, -2, and -3) comprise a subfamily of small hydrophobic membrane proteins. The putative four-transmembrane domain structure as well as the genomic structure are highly conserved among family members. PMP22 and EMPs are expressed in many tissues, and functions in cell growth, differentiation, and apoptosis have been reported. EMP-1 is highly up-regulated during squamous differentiation and in certain tumors, and a role in tumorigenesis has been proposed. PMP22 is most highly expressed in peripheral nerves, where it is localized in the compact portion of myelin. It plays a crucial role in normal physiological and pathological processes in the peripheral nervous system. Progress in molecular genetics has revealed that genetic alterations in the PMP22 gene, including duplications, deletions, and point mutations, are responsible for several forms of hereditary peripheral neuropathies, including Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1A (CMT1A), Dejerine-Sottas syndrome (DDS), and hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP). The natural mouse mutants Trembler and Trembler-J contain a missense mutation in different hydrophobic domains of PMP22, resulting in demyelination and Schwann cell proliferation. Transgenic mice carrying many copies of the PMP22 gene and PMP22-null mice display a variety of defects in the initial steps of myelination and/or maintenance of myelination, whereas no pathological alterations are detected in other tissues normally expressing PMP22. Further characterization of the interactions of PMP22 and EMPs with other proteins as well as their regulation will provide additional insight into their normal physiological function and their roles in disease and possibly will result in the development of therapeutic tools.
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) was initially described more than 100 years ago by Charcot, Marie, and Tooth. It was only recently, however, that molecular genetic studies of CMT have uncovered the underlying causes of most forms of the diseases. Most cases of CMT1 are associated with a 1.5-Mb tandem duplication in 17p11.2-p12 that encompasses the PMP22 gene. Although many genes may exist in this large duplicated region, PMP22 appears to be the major dosage-sensitive gene. CMT1A is the first autosomal dominant disease associated with a gene dosage effect due to an inherited DNA rearrangement. There is no mutant gene, but instead the disease phenotype results from having 3 copies of a normal gene. Furthermore, these findings suggest that therapeutic intervention in CMT1A duplication patients may be possible by normalizing the amount of PMP22 mRNA levels. Alternatively, CMT1A can be caused by mutations in the PMP22 gene. Other forms of CMT are associated with mutations in the MPZ (CMT1B) and Cx32 (CMTX) genes. Thus, mutations in different genes can cause similar CMT phenotypes. The related but more severe neuropathy, Dejerine-Sottas syndrome (DSS), can also be caused by mutations in the PMP22 and MPZ genes. All 3 genes thus far identified by CMT researchers appear to play an important role in the myelin formation or maintenance of peripheral nerves. CMT1A, CMT1B, CMTX, hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP), and DSS have been called myelin disorders or "myelino-pathies." Other demyelinating forms, CMT1C and CMT-AR, may be caused by mutations of not yet identified myelin genes expressed in Schwann cells. The clinically distinct disease HNPP is caused by a 1.5-Mb deletion in 17p11.2-p12, which spans the same region duplicated in most CMT1A patients. Underexpression of the PMP22 gene causes HNPP just as overexpression of PMP22 causes CMT1A. Thus, 2 different phenotypes can be caused by dosage variations of the same gene. It is apparent that the CMT1A duplication and HNPP deletion are the reciprocal products of a recombination event during meiosis mediated through the CMT1A-REPs. CMT1A and HNPP could be thought of as a "genomic disease" more than single gene disorders. Other genetic disorders may also prove to arise from recombination events mediated by specific chromosomal structural features of the human genome (102). Further studies on the recombination mechanism of CMT and HNPP might reveal the causes of site specific homologous recombination in the human genome. The discovery of the PMP22 gene in the 1.5-Mb CMT1A duplication/HNPP deletion critical region also suggests that the clinical phenotype of chromosome aneuploid syndromes may result from the effect of a small subset of dosage-sensitive genes mapping within the region of aneuploidy. The understanding of the molecular basis of CMT1 and related disorders has allowed accurate DNA diagnosis and genetic counseling of inherited peripheral neuropathies and will make it possible to develop rational strategies for therapy. As several loci for CMT2 have been identified, the genes responsible for CMT2 will most likely be disclosed using positional cloning and candidate gene approaches in the near future.
Until 10 years ago, the genetic basis of Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease was largely unknown. With the finding of an intrachromosomal duplication on chromosome 17 in 1991, associated with the most commonly found subtype CMT1A, and the discovery of a point mutation in the peripheral myelin protein-22 (pmp22) gene in the Trembler mouse in 1992, the groundwork was laid down for a novel chapter in the elucidation of the molecular basis of this large group of peripheral neuropathies. In the meantime, several different genes have been found to be associated with different forms of demyelinating and axonal forms of CMT. In this review, we will summarize what is known today about the genetics of this group of disease which constitute the most common known monogenetic disorder affecting the nervous system in man, the animal models that have been generated, and what we have learned about the underlying disease mechanisms. Furthermore, we will review how this gain of knowledge about CMT may open new avenues to the development of novel treatment strategies.
The peripheral myelin proteins P0 and PMP22 are associated in preparations of compact myelin and in cell cultures coexpressing both molecules. The mechanism of this interaction, however, still needs to be unravelled. We have established three different (cell-cell, cell-protein, protein-protein based) assay systems using retrovirally transduced HeLa cells that overexpressed either PMP22 or P0 and purified GST fusion oligopeptides of PMP22 and P0 to detect domain-specific interactions between these proteins. The results revealed that PMP22 and P0 are involved in both trans-homophilic and trans-heterophilic interactions. Moreover, the data clearly indicate that the heterophilic trans-interaction is mediated through the second loop of PMP22, while the first loop is involved in homophilic trans-interaction of PMP22 proteins. Both modes of interaction are due to direct protein-protein binding. In addition, we demonstrate that disease-related point mutations of P0 resulted in a decreased adhesion capability correlating with the severity of the respective disease phenotype.
Mutations in peripheral myelin protein 22 (PMP22) result in the most common form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease, CMT1A. This hereditary peripheral neuropathy is characterized by dysmyelination of peripheral nerves, reduced nerve conduction velocity, and muscle weakness. APMP22 point mutation in L16P (leucine 16 to proline) underlies a form of human CMT1A as well as the Trembler-J mouse model of CMT1A. Homozygote Trembler-J mice (Tr(J)) die early postnatally, fail to make peripheral myelin, and, therefore, are more similar to patients with congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy than those with CMT1A. Because recent studies of inherited neuropathies in humans and mice have demonstrated that dysfunction and degeneration of neuromuscular synapses or junctions (NMJs) often precede impairments in axonal conduction, we examined the structure and function of NMJs in Tr(J)mice. Although synapses appeared to be normally innervated even in end-stage Tr(J)mice, the growth and maturation of the NMJs were altered. In addition, the amplitudes of nerve-evoked muscle endplate potentials were reduced and there was transmission failure during sustained nerve stimulation. These results suggest that the severe congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy that characterizes Tr(J)mice results in structural and functional deficits of the developing NMJ.
The hereditary demyelinating neuropathy Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1A is caused by duplication or by point mutations of the PMP22 gene. Histopathological differences in these genotypes suggest distinct disease mechanisms. In the present investigation we demonstrate a pathologically altered cellular distribution of PMP22 in sural nerve biopsies of patients with PMP22 point mutations. In these patients, in contrast to findings in patients with PMP22 duplication, PMP22 partially accumulates in the Schwann cells instead of being inserted in the myelin sheath. These findings may explain the different histopathology and may suggest different mechanisms of pathogenesis in these genotypes.
Hereditary neuropathies are classified into several subtypes according to clinical, electrophysiologic and pathologic findings. Recent genetic studies have revealed their phenotypic and genetic diversities. In the primary peripheral demyelinating neuropathies(CMT1), at least 9 genes have been associated with the disorders; altered dosage of peripheral myelin protein 22(PMP22) or point mutation of PMP22, the gap junction protein 1(GJB1), the myelin protein zero gene(MPZ), the early growth response gene 2(EGR2), the myotubularin-related protein 2 gene(MTMR2), the N-myc downstream-regulated gene 1 (NDRG1), the L-periaxin gene(PRX), SRY-related HMG-BOX gene 10(SOX10) and the ganglioside-induced differentiation-associated protein 1 gene(GDAP1). In the primary peripheral axonal neuropathies(CMT2), at least 8 genes have been associated with these disorders; the neurofilament light chain gene(NEFL), the kinesin 1B gene(KIF1B), the gigaxonin gene(GAN1), Lamin A/C(LMNA) and tyrosyl-DNA phosphodiesterase 1(TDP1). In addition, some mutations in GJB1, MPZ and GDAP1 also present with clinical and electrophysiologic findings of CMT2. Mutation of NEFL or KIF1B cause dominantly inherited axonal neuropathies, whereas mutation of GJB1 or MPZ can present as genocopies of dominant axonal neuropathies. In addition to the above diseases, we have reported a new type of NMSNP(MIM # *604484) characterized by proximal dominant neurogenic atrophy, obvious sensory nerve involvement and the gene locus on 3q13. Here, we summarize the genetic bases of hereditary neuropathies and attempt to highlight significant genotype-phenotype correlations.
Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease, also known as peroneal muscular atrophy or hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy, is among the most frequent hereditary disorders of the nervous system. The relatively homogeneous clinical phenotype involves mainly progressive weakness and wasting of distal muscles; it starts and predominates in the peroneal muscles. Electrophysiological and pathology data distinguish two principal forms of CMT: demyelinating and axonal. More than 20 distinct genetic subtypes have been identified to date and other new loci and genes remain to be discovered, thus demonstrating wide genetic heterogeneity and a number of different pathophysiological mechanisms. The classification of these different forms is based on both the mode of inheritance--autosomal dominant, recessive or X-linked--and the neuropathy type--demyelinating or axonal or "intermediate". The principal dominant forms are CMT1A, due to a duplication or point mutation in the PMP22 gene, and CMTX, due to mutations in the connexin 32 gene. Autosomal recessive forms are more frequent in North Africa. The most common involve mutations of GDAP1 or lamin A/C and generally lead to more severe phenotypes than the dominant forms. The great genetic heterogeneity necessitates a strategy for genetic diagnosis. It is based in part on the classification of the different genetic forms and in part on the phenotypic particularities and the frequency of the responsible genes in the population under study.
The demyelinating hereditary motor and sensory neuropathies (HMSN) are a group of inherited progressive neuropathies with markedly decreased nerve conduction velocity and chronic segmental demyelination in the peripheral nerve. Inheritance is autosomal dominant (AD) or autosomal recessive (AR). Autosomal dominant demyelinating HMSN (AD HMSN type I) is genetically heterogeneous and at least three different gene loci have been identified: a locus on chromosome 17 (HMSN Ia), a locus on chromosome 1 (HMSN Ib) and a locus not linked to chromosome 17 or 1 (HMSN nonIa-nonIb). HMSN type Ia is the most common form of AD HMSN. Recently, it has been demonstrated that the HMSN Ia phenotype results either from a duplication of chromosome 17p11.2 or from a point mutation in the peripheral nerve-specific PMP-22 gene which is located in the duplication. Pathology of type Ia is dominated by chronic segmental demyelination with classical onion bulbs. Autosomal recessive demyelinating HMSN shows a broad spectrum of pathological features. The genetic defect or defects are not yet known. On the basis of morphological characteristics we were able to discern four subtypes. Two AR subtypes are clinically and electrophysiologically comparable to AD HMSN type I, namely AR HMSN type I with basal lamina onion bulbs and AR HMSN type I with focally folded myelin. Two AR subtypes with amyelination, respectively or hypomyelination of the peripheral nerves are also more severely affected both clinically and electrophysiologically and could be designated as HMSN type III. A third condition with a HMSN type III phenotype shows mainly classical onion bulbs in peripheral nerves, but the inherited nature of this disorder is uncertain and identical features have been described in steroid-responsive inflammatory demyelinating neuropathy. The morphologically based subtypes of AR demyelinating HMSN may represent different genetic disorders, allelic differences or phenotypic variations.
Inherited disorders of peripheral nerves represent a common group of neurologic diseases. Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy type 1 (CMT1) is a genetically heterogeneous group of chronic demyelinating polyneuropathies with loci mapping to chromosome 17 (CMT1A), chromosome 1 (CMT1B) and to another unknown autosome (CMT1C). CMT1A is most often associated with a tandem 1.5-megabase (Mb) duplication in chromosome 17p11.2-12, or in rare patients may result from a point mutation in the peripheral myelin protein-22 (PMP22) gene. CMT1B is associated with point mutations in the myelin protein zero (P0 or MPZ) gene. The molecular defect in CMT1C is unknown. X-linked Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy (CMTX), which has clinical features similar to CMT1, is associated with mutations in the connexin32 gene. Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy type 2 (CMT2) is an axonal neuropathy, also of undetermined cause. One form of CMT2 maps to chromosome 1p36 (CMT2A), another to chromosome 3p (CMT2B) and another to 7p (CMT2D). Dejerine-Sottas disease (DSD), also called hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type III (HMSNIII), is a severe, infantile-onset demyelinating polyneuropathy syndrome that may be associated with point mutations in either the PMP22 gene or the P0 gene and shares considerable clinical and pathological features with CMT1. Hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP) is an autosomal dominant disorder that results in a recurrent, episodic demyelinating neuropathy. HNPP is associated with a 1.5-Mb deletion in chromosome 17p11.2-12 and results from reduced expression of the PMP22 gene. CMT1A and HNPP are reciprocal duplication/deletion syndromes originating from unequal crossover during germ cell meiosis. Other rare forms of demyelinating peripheral neuropathies map to chromosome 8q, 10q and 11q. Hereditary neuralgic amyotrophy (familial brachial plexus neuropathy) is an autosomal dominant disorder causing painful, recurrent brachial plexopathies and maps to chromosome 17q25.
Hereditary neuropathies are classified into Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT), familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP), hereditary motor neuropathies (HMN) and hereditary sensory (and autonomic) neuropathies (HSAN). CMTs are furthermore classified into demyelinating neuropathies (CMT1), axonal neuropathies (CMT2) and intermediate form. Duplication of PMP22 (CMT1A) accounts for about 70% of CMT1 and MFN2 mutations account for 25% of CMT2. Genes involved in phosphoinositide regulation cause CMT4; MTMR2 mutation in CMT 4B1 and MTMR13/SBF2 mutation in CMT4B2. In addition to these genes, FIG4, which is a causative gene of pale tremor mouse, is newly identified as a gene for CMT4J. MFN2 and GDAP1 cause CMT2 or CMT4. These genes regulate mitochondrial fusion and fission. Altered axonal mitochondrial transport is suggested as the pathogenesis of the CMT. In animal model with pmp22 duplication, ascorbic acid seems to be effective to prevent disease progression. Nationwide trial of ascorbic acid therapy for CMT1A is now ongoing by the intractable neuropathy study group. Curcumin treatment educes apoptosis of cells that express PMP22 point mutation and partially mitigates the severe neuropathy phenotype of Trembler-J mouse model in a dose-dependent manner. Curcumin treatment may have a potential therapeutic role in CMT with PMP22 point mutation in humans. The high throughput system of diagnosis for CMT has been developed by employing a resequencing array system.
The study of the morphological phenotypes in patients with different mutations of the PMP22 gene gives additional insights into the role of the protein in myelin function. The pathology in young patients is in some aspects different from the pathology in older patients, providing essential and additional information about the early disease processes in humans induced by different PMP22 mutational mechanisms. Duplication of chromosome 17p11.2, causing an overexpression of the PMP22 gene, results in early hypermyelination. This suggests that PMP22 has a function in establishing the proper myelin thickness, probably in response to an axonal signal. Demyelination and remyelination with gradual formation of onion bulbs occur apparently as secondary processes, but these processes subside at the end of the first decade. PMP22 missense mutations usually result in a more severe phenotype showing an early hypomyelination and onion bulb formation, likely disturbing normal myelin formation and maintenance. The morphological differences with duplication cases underline the essential difference in pathogenesis between duplication and missense mutations despite the large overlap in clinical and electrophysiological phenotypes. The reciprocal deletion of chromosome 17p11.2, resulting in an underexpression of the PMP22 gene, is responsible for the clinical phenotype of HNPP. As the nerve abnormalities in HNPP show a marked resemblance to the changes in experimental and genuine human entrapment neuropathies, it is postulated that PMP22 has a function in adhesion of myelin lamellae, preventing mutual longitudinal sliding. Deletion of one PMP22 copy results in increased susceptibility for mechanical forces through which already minor nerve injuries might induce a longitudinal displacement of myelin lamellae. The frame shift mutation Gly94(insG) combines a loss of function like in the common deletion HNPP with a mild CMT1 phenotype, likely inducing a (mild) toxic gain of function by disturbing myelin formation and maintenance, comparable to the effect in missense mutations.
We have generated several PMP22 animal mutants with altered PMP22 gene dosage. A moderate increase in the number of PMP22 genes led to hypomyelination comparable to CMT1A, whereas high copy numbers of transgenic PMP22 resulted in phenotypes resembling more severe forms of hereditary motor and sensory neuropathies. In contrast, eliminating one of the two normal PMP22 genes by gene targeting caused unstable focal hypermyelination (tomacula) similar to the pathology in HNPP. A related but more severe phenotype was observed in mice that lack PMP22 completely. Detailed analysis of the different PMP22 mutants revealed, in addition to the obvious myelinopathy, distal axonopathy as a characteristic feature. We conclude that the maintenance of axons might be a promising target for therapeutic interventions in these demyelinating hereditary neuropathies. Furthermore, our results strongly support the concept that PMP22-related neuropathies (and most likely also other forms of inherited motor and sensory neuropathies) should be viewed as the consequence of impaired neuron-Schwann cell interactions that are likely already to be operative during development. Such considerations should be taken into account in the design of potential novel treatment strategies.
Inherited neuropathies are clinically and genetically heterogeneous. At least 28 genes and 12 loci have been associated with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) and related inherited neuropathies. Most causes of inherited neuropathy have been discovered by positional cloning technique and in the past two years, the pace of CMT gene discovery has accelerated. Genetic studies have revealed the following gene mutations as the causes of inherited neuropathies; PMP22, MPZ, EGR2, SOX10, SIMPLE/LITAF, ARHGEF10 for CMT1 (autosomal dominant demyelinating form); GDAP1, MTMR2, SBF2/MTMR13, KIAA1985, NDRG1 PRX for CMT4 (autosomal recessive demyelinating form), MFN2, KIF1B, RAB7, GARS, NEFL, HSPB1, HSPB8 for CMT2 (autosomal dominant axonal form); LMNA, GAN1, KCC3, TDP1, APTX, SETX for AR-CMT2 (autosomal recessive axonal form); GIB1 for CMTX (X-linked CMT); DNM2 for CMT-DI (autosomal dominant CMT with intermediate nerve conduction velocities); and DHH for minifascicular neuropathy. These discovered CMT causing genes/proteins include those which show unpredictable correlations with the peripheral nervous system. However, these genes/proteins are definitely important for the peripheral nerve, and their discovery should pave the way for dramatic progress in the understanding of peripheral nerve biology. On the other hand, genotype-phenotype correlations of these genes are also important in order to understand the pathomechanisms of inherited neuropathy. Because, based on mutation studies, a large number of genes associated with both the CMT1/4 and CMT2 forms have been identified, it is usually difficult to predict the causative gene based on clinical information from patients without specific complications. To clarify the specific features and molecular mechanisms of five diseases that we previously reported, we reviewed recent progress in HMSN-P linked to chromosome 3, CMT4F caused by PRX, CMT4A caused by GDAP1, CMT4B2 caused by SBF2/MTMR13, and SCAN1 caused by TDP1. HMSN-P is characterized by late onset, proximal dominant severe muscle weakness, fasciculations, muscle cramp and sensory involvement. HMSN-P is a primary neuronopathy. Mutations in periaxin are associated with a broad spectrum of demyelinating neuropathies including DSS, a sensory dominant form and early onset slowly progressive CMT. Pathologically, loss of myelinated fibers, demyelination, small onion bulb formations, tomacula formation and myelin foldings were seen in sural nerves. Absence of septate like junction in the paranodal loop suggests that periaxin could be required for the adhesion complex. GDAP1 is a relatively common cause of CMT4. Half of reported patients showed the demyelinating form, while the rest showed the axonal form. The typical feature of CMT4A is paresis of the vocal cords and diaphragm. CMT4B2 is characterized by autosomal recessive, juvenile onset glaucoma and focally folded myelin in sural nerves. SBF2/MTMR13 mutations cause CMT4B2. Early onset glaucoma was seen in patients with nonsense mutations. SBF2/MTMR13 and MTMR2, which is the cause of CMT4B1, could be acting on the same 3-phosphoinositide signaling pathway. Clinical phenotypes of patients with TDP1, APTX, or SETX mutations share common clinical findings, namely cerebellar ataxia and axonal neuropathy. TDP1 and aprataxin both act on the single strand break repair pathway, with TDP1 working specifically on topoisomerase I related SSBR. Senataxin is a RNA helicase acting on RNA maturation and termination in yeast. Since these three proteins share a common pathway, disruption in any of them could induce a delay in the transcription process. The low rate of protein supply could lead to deaths of large neuronal cells.
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) affects the peripheral nervous system. It is generally inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern, but also is inherited in recessive or an X-linked pattern. The degree of severity can vary greatly from patient to patient, even within the same family. Traditionally, the different classes of CMT have been divided into demyelinating forms and axonal forms. Until 10 years ago, the genetic basis of CMT disease was largely unknown. An intrachromosomal duplication on chromosome 17 was found in 1991, and a point mutation in the peripheral myelin protein-22 gene was discovered in 1992. The work starts a new stage of the molecular basis of this large group of peripheral neuropathies. In this review, we will summarize what is known today about the genetics of CMT, and what we have learned about the underlying disease mechanisms.
本报告综合了Dejerine-Sottas综合征(DSD)从遗传发现到致病机制及治疗探索的全方位研究。核心研究重点已从最初的PMP22和MPZ基因突变鉴定,深入到蛋白质错配引起的内质网应激、细胞内转运障碍以及转录调控失衡。临床诊断正通过神经超声和多基因测序不断精确化,而基于蛋白质稳态调节和基因干预的转化医学研究正通过多样化的动物模型逐步向临床应用迈进。