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1.
Neuropathol Appl Neurobiol ; 44(5): 449-462, 2018 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28574618

ABSTRACT

AIMS: Pompe disease is an autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disorder resulting from deficiency of acid α-glucosidase (GAA) enzyme. Histopathological hallmarks in skeletal muscle tissue are fibre vacuolization and autophagy. Since 2006, enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) is the only approved treatment with human recombinant GAA alglucosidase alfa. We designed a study to examine ERT-related skeletal muscle changes in 18 modestly to moderately affected late onset Pompe disease (LOPD) patients along with the relationship between morphological/biochemical changes and clinical outcomes. Treatment duration was short-to-long term. METHODS: We examined muscle biopsies from 18 LOPD patients at both histopathological and biochemical level. All patients underwent two muscle biopsies, before and after ERT administration respectively. The study is partially retrospective because the first biopsies were taken before the study was designed, whereas the second biopsy was always performed after at least 6 months of ERT administration. RESULTS: After ERT, 15 out of 18 patients showed improved 6-min walking test (6MWT; P = 0.0007) and most of them achieved respiratory stabilization. Pretreatment muscle biopsies disclosed marked histopathological variability, ranging from an almost normal pattern to a severe vacuolar myopathy. After treatment, we detected morphological improvement in 15 patients and worsening in three patients. Post-ERT GAA enzymatic activity was mildly increased compared with pretreatment levels in all patients. Protein levels of the mature enzyme increased in 14 of the 18 patients (mean increase = +35%; P < 0.05). Additional studies demonstrated an improved autophagic flux after ERT in some patients. CONCLUSIONS: ERT positively modified skeletal muscle pathology as well as motor and respiratory outcomes in the majority of LOPD patients.


Subject(s)
Glycogen Storage Disease Type II/drug therapy , Glycogen Storage Disease Type II/pathology , Muscle, Skeletal/drug effects , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , alpha-Glucosidases/therapeutic use , Adult , Aged , Enzyme Replacement Therapy/methods , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Recombinant Proteins/therapeutic use , Retrospective Studies
2.
Eur J Neurol ; 25(1): 154-163, 2018 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29029362

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Mutations in the small heat-shock protein 22 gene (HSPB8) have been associated with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 2L, distal hereditary motor neuropathy (dHMN) type IIa and, more recently, distal myopathy/myofibrillar myopathy (MFM) with protein aggregates and TDP-43 inclusions. The aim was to report a novel family with HSPB8K141E -related dHMN/MFM and to investigate, in a patient muscle biopsy, whether the presence of protein aggregates was paralleled by altered TDP-43 function. METHODS: We reviewed clinical and genetic data. We assessed TDP-43 expression by qPCR and alternative splicing of four previously validated direct TDP-43 target exons in four genes by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. RESULTS: The triplets and their mother presented in the second to third decade of life with progressive weakness affecting distal and proximal lower limb and truncal muscles. Nerve conduction study showed a motor axonal neuropathy. The clinical features, moderately raised creatin kinase levels, selective pattern of muscle involvement on magnetic resonance imaging and pathological changes on muscle biopsy, including the presence of protein aggregates, supported the diagnosis of a contemporary primary muscle involvement. In affected muscle tissue we observed a consistent alteration of TDP-43-dependent splicing in three out of four TDP-43-target transcripts (POLDIP3, FNIP1 and BRD8), as well as a significant decrease of TDP-43 mRNA levels. CONCLUSIONS: Our study confirmed the role of mutated HSPB8 as a cause of a combined neuromuscular disorder encompassing dHMN and MFM with protein aggregates. We identified impaired RNA metabolism, secondary to TDP-43 loss of function, as a possible pathological mechanism of HSPB8K141E toxicity, leading to muscle and nerve degeneration.


Subject(s)
DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Heat-Shock Proteins/genetics , Hereditary Sensory and Motor Neuropathy/genetics , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/genetics , Adult , Age of Onset , Alternative Splicing , Biopsy , Disease Progression , Female , Hereditary Sensory and Motor Neuropathy/diagnostic imaging , Hereditary Sensory and Motor Neuropathy/pathology , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Molecular Chaperones , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Neural Conduction , Pedigree , RNA/metabolism , TDP-43 Proteinopathies/genetics
4.
Cell Death Dis ; 3: e418, 2012 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23152054

ABSTRACT

A resolutive therapy for Duchene muscular dystrophy, a severe degenerative disease of the skeletal muscle, is still lacking. Because autophagy has been shown to be crucial in clearing dysfunctional organelles and in preventing tissue damage, we investigated its pathogenic role and its suitability as a target for new therapeutic interventions in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Here we demonstrate that autophagy is severely impaired in muscles from patients affected by DMD and mdx mice, a model of the disease, with accumulation of damaged organelles. The defect in autophagy was accompanied by persistent activation via phosphorylation of Akt, mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and of the autophagy-inhibiting pathways dependent on them, including the translation-initiation factor 4E-binding protein 1 and the ribosomal protein S6, and downregulation of the autophagy-inducing genes LC3, Atg12, Gabarapl1 and Bnip3. The defective autophagy was rescued in mdx mice by long-term exposure to a low-protein diet. The treatment led to normalisation of Akt and mTOR signalling; it also reduced significantly muscle inflammation, fibrosis and myofibre damage, leading to recovery of muscle function. This study highlights novel pathogenic aspects of DMD and suggests autophagy as a new effective therapeutic target. The treatment we propose can be safely applied and immediately tested for efficacy in humans.


Subject(s)
Autophagy , Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne/physiopathology , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Humans , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred mdx , Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne/genetics , Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne/metabolism , Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne/therapy , Oncogene Protein v-akt/genetics , Oncogene Protein v-akt/metabolism , Signal Transduction , TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases/genetics , TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism
5.
J Inherit Metab Dis ; 32 Suppl 1: S161-8, 2009 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19357989

ABSTRACT

Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD IV, or Andersen disease) is an autosomal recessive disorder due to the deficiency of 1,4-alpha-glucan branching enzyme (or glycogen branching enzyme, GBE1), resulting in an accumulation of amylopectin-like polysaccharide in muscle, liver, heart and central and peripheral nervous system. Typically, the presentation is in childhood with liver involvement up to cirrhosis. The neuromuscular form varies in onset (congenital, perinatal, juvenile and adult) and in severity. Congenital cases are rare, and fewer than 20 cases have been described and genetically determined so far. This form is characterized by polyhydramnios, neonatal hypotonia, and neuronal involvement; hepatopathy is uncommon, and the babies usually die between 4 weeks and 4 months of age. We report the case of an infant who presented severe hypotonia, dilatative cardiomyopathy, mild hepatopathy, and brain lateral ventricle haemorrhage, features consistent with the congenital form of GSD IV. He died at one month of life of cardiorespiratory failure. Muscle biopsy and heart and liver autoptic specimens showed many vacuoles filled with PAS-positive diastase-resistant materials. Electron-microscopic analysis showed mainly polyglucosan accumulations in all the tissues examined. Postmortem examination showed the presence of vacuolated neurons containing this abnormal polysaccharide. GBE1 biochemical activity was virtually absent in muscle and fibroblasts, and totally lacking in liver and heart as well as glycogen synthase activity. GBE1 gene sequence analysis revealed a novel homozygous nonsense mutation, p.E152X, in exon 4, correlating with the lack of enzyme activity and with the severe neonatal involvement. Our findings contribute to increasing the spectrum of mutation associated with congenital GSD IV.


Subject(s)
Codon, Nonsense , Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/deficiency , Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/diagnosis , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Base Sequence , Brain/enzymology , Brain/pathology , DNA Mutational Analysis , Fatal Outcome , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Homozygote , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Liver/enzymology , Liver/pathology , Male , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Myocardium/enzymology , Myocardium/pathology
6.
Clin Neuropathol ; 28(2): 125-8, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19353844

ABSTRACT

We describe the clinicopathologic features of a 69-year-old man affected with acute onset Churg-Strauss syndrome with major peripheral nerve involvement. At admission the patient presented a one-week history of distal upper-limb asymmetrical paresthesias. Asthma had been present since the age of 55 and treated with leukotriene receptor antagonists (LTAs, Montelukast) for a few years. Multiple pulmonary infiltrates had been diagnosed during follow-up for melanoma. During hospitalization he showed rapidly progressive weakness worsening within a few hours; cerebrospinal fluid analysis, cervical MRI, head CT scan, nerve conduction studies and peripheral nerve and skeletal muscle biopsies were performed. Blood analysis showed leukocytosis and marked eosinophilia; p-ANCA were positive. Sural nerve biopsy showed a marked loss of myelinated fibers, thrombosed vessels surrounded by mononuclear and eosinophilic cells, necrotizing and hyaline degeneration. Eosinophilic infiltrates were shown in May-Grunwald-Giemsa stained sections. The eosinophils mostly occupied the outer zone of the adventitia at the margin of the active lesion. Perivascular cellular infiltrates within the epineurium were immunoreactive for T-lymphocytes and macrophages. Strong HLA-DR immunostaining was present in the perineurium and membrane attack complex deposition was present in a few endoneurial capillaries. Muscle biopsy showed neurogenic changes and one vessel surrounded by mononuclear cells. After a few days of corticosteroid therapy leukocytosis and eosinophilia normalized and the patient's clinical features stabilized.


Subject(s)
Melanoma/pathology , Peripheral Nerves/pathology , Polyneuropathies/physiopathology , Aged , Churg-Strauss Syndrome/complications , Churg-Strauss Syndrome/pathology , Churg-Strauss Syndrome/physiopathology , Humans , Male , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Nerve Degeneration/pathology , Nerve Fibers, Myelinated/pathology , Peripheral Nerves/physiopathology , Polyneuropathies/complications , Polyneuropathies/pathology
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