Islamabad, Dec 30: A global team of neuroscientists, led by researchers at Mayo Clinic
in Florida, has found the gene responsible for a brain disorder that may be much
more common than once believed.
In the Nature Genetics, the researchers
say they identified 14 different mutations in the gene CSF1R that lead to
development of hereditary diffuse leukoencephalopathy with spheroids (HDLS).
This is a devastating disorder of the brain's white matter that leads to
death between ages 40 and 60. People who inherit the abnormal gene always
develop HDLS. Until now, a definite diagnosis of HDLS required examination of
brain tissue at biopsy or autopsy.
The finding is important because the
researchers suspect that HDLS is more common than once thought and a genetic
diagnosis will now be possible without need for a brain biopsy or autopsy.
According to the study's senior investigator, neurologist Zbigniew K. Wszolek,
M.D., a significant number of people who tested positive for the abnormal gene
in this study had been diagnosed with a wide range of other conditions. These
individuals were related to a patient known to have HDLS, and so their genes
were also examined.
"Because the symptoms of HDLS vary so widely --
everything from behavior and personality changes to seizures and movement
problems -- these patients were misdiagnosed as having either schizophrenia,
epilepsy, frontotemporal dementia, Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis,
stroke, or other disorders," says Dr. Wszolek. "Many of these patients were
therefore treated with drugs that offered only toxic side effects.
"Given
this finding, we may soon have a blood test that can help doctors diagnose HDLS,
and I predict we will find it is much more common than anyone could have
imagined," he says.
Dr. Wszolek is internationally known for his
long-term efforts to bring together researchers from around the world to help
find cases of inherited brain disorders and discover their genetic
roots.
Dr. Wszolek's interest in HDLS began when a severely disabled
young woman came to see him in 2003 and mentioned that other members of her
family were affected. The diagnosis of HDLS was made by his Mayo Clinic
colleague, Dennis W. Dickson, M.D., who reviewed the autopsy findings of the
patient's uncle, who had previously been misdiagnosed as multiple sclerosis, and
subsequently, Dr. Wszolek's patient and her father. All members of the family
had HDLS.
Dr. Dickson had identified other cases of HDLS from Florida,
New York, Oregon and Kansas in the Mayo Clinic Florida brain bank and knew of a
large kindred in Virginia with similar pathology, based upon a presentation at
the annual meeting of the American Association of Neuropathologists. With
concerted efforts, Dr. Wszolek and collaborators at University of Virginia were
able to obtain DNA samples from the Virginia kindred. Dr. Wszolek also sought
other cases, particularly those that had been reported in the neuropathology
literature, and he was able to obtain samples from Norway, the United Kingdom,
Germany and Canada, and other sites in the U.S. He and his team of investigators
and collaborators have since published studies describing the clinical,
pathologic and imaging characteristics of the disorder, and they have held five
international meetings on HDLS.
In this study, which included 38
researchers from 12 institutions in five countries, the study's first author,
Rosa Rademakers, Ph.D., led the effort to find the gene responsible for HDLS.
Her laboratory studied DNA samples from 14 families in which at least one member
was diagnosed with HDLS and compared these with samples from more than 2,000
disease-free participants. The gene was ultimately found using a combination of
traditional genetic linkage studies and recently developed state-of-the art
sequencing methods. Most family members studied -- who were found to have HDLS
gene mutations -- were not diagnosed with the disease, but with something else,
thus emphasizing the notion that HDLS is an underdiagnosed disorder.
The
CSF1R protein is an important receptor in the brain that is primarily present in
microglia, the immune cells of the brain. "We identified a different CSF1R
mutation in every HDLS family that we studied," says Dr. Rademakers. "All
mutations are located in the kinase domain of CSF1R, which is critical for its
activity, suggesting that these mutations may lead to deficient microglia
activity. How this leads to white matter pathology in HDLS patients is not yet
understood, but we now have an important lead to study."
"With no other
disease have we found so many affected families so quickly," says Dr. Wszolek.
"That tells me this disease is not rare, but quite common." He adds, "It is
fantastic that you can start an investigation with a single case and end up,
with the help of many hands, in what we believe to be a world-class gene
discovery."
Ends
SA/EN
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» 'Rare' brain disorder may be more common than thought
'Rare' brain disorder may be more common than thought
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