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Treatable childhood neuronopathy caused by mutations in riboflavin transporter RFVT2

Authors :
Foley, A Reghan
Menezes, Manoj P
Pandraud, Amelie
Gonzalez, Michael A
Al-Odaib, Ahmad
Abrams, Alexander J
Sugano, Kumiko
Yonezawa, Atsushi
Manzur, Adnan Y
Burns, Joshua
Hughes, Imelda
McCullagh, B Gary
Jungbluth, Heinz
Lim, Ming J
Lin, Jean-Pierre
Megarbane, Andre
Urtizberea, J Andoni
Shah, Ayaz H
Antony, Jayne
Webster, Richard
Broomfield, Alexander
Ng, Joanne
Mathew, Ann A
O'Byrne, James J
Forman, Eva
Scoto, Mariacristina
Prasad, Manish
O'Brien, Katherine
Olpin, Simon
Oppenheim, Marcus
Hargreaves, Iain
Land, John M
Wang, Min X
Carpenter, Kevin
Horvath, Rita
Straub, Volker
Lek, Monkol
Gold, Wendy
Farrell, Michael O
Brandner, Sebastian
Phadke, Rahul
Matsubara, Kazuo
McGarvey, Michael L
Scherer, Steven S
Baxter, Peter S
King, Mary D
Clayton, Peter
Rahman, Shamima
Reilly, Mary M
Ouvrier, Robert A
Christodoulou, John
Züchner, Stephan
Muntoni, Francesco
Houlden, Henry
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP)

Abstract

Childhood onset motor neuron diseases or neuronopathies are a clinically heterogeneous group of disorders. A particularly severe subgroup first described in 1894, and subsequently called Brown-Vialetto-Van Laere syndrome, is characterized by progressive pontobulbar palsy, sensorineural hearing loss and respiratory insufficiency. There has been no treatment for this progressive neurodegenerative disorder, which leads to respiratory failure and usually death during childhood. We recently reported the identification of SLC52A2, encoding riboflavin transporter RFVT2, as a new causative gene for Brown-Vialetto-Van Laere syndrome. We used both exome and Sanger sequencing to identify SLC52A2 mutations in patients presenting with cranial neuropathies and sensorimotor neuropathy with or without respiratory insufficiency. We undertook clinical, neurophysiological and biochemical characterization of patients with mutations in SLC52A2, functionally analysed the most prevalent mutations and initiated a regimen of high-dose oral riboflavin. We identified 18 patients from 13 families with compound heterozygous or homozygous mutations in SLC52A2. Affected individuals share a core phenotype of rapidly progressive axonal sensorimotor neuropathy (manifesting with sensory ataxia, severe weakness of the upper limbs and axial muscles with distinctly preserved strength of the lower limbs), hearing loss, optic atrophy and respiratory insufficiency. We demonstrate that SLC52A2 mutations cause reduced riboflavin uptake and reduced riboflavin transporter protein expression, and we report the response to high-dose oral riboflavin therapy in patients with SLC52A2 mutations, including significant and sustained clinical and biochemical improvements in two patients and preliminary clinical response data in 13 patients with associated biochemical improvements in 10 patients. The clinical and biochemical responses of this SLC52A2-specific cohort suggest that riboflavin supplementation can ameliorate the progression of this neurodegenerative condition, particularly when initiated soon after the onset of symptoms.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7cc1ef9c04eac9ea3367961ae1ef80f3