Andrea Stachon, M.D.a, Francisco Baptista Assumpção Junior, M.D., PhD b, Salmo Raskin M.D., PhD c
19 de março de 2007
Sindrome de Rett: caracterização clinica e molecular de dois casos brasileiros
Rett syndrome: clinical and molecular characterization of two Brazilian patients
Andrea Stachon, M.D.a, Francisco Baptista Assumpção Junior, M.D., PhD b, Salmo Raskin M.D., PhD c
a
b Instituto de Psicologia e Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Sao Paulo,
c Centro de Aconselhamento e Laboratorio Genetika,
Correspondence and reprint requests to be addressed to:
Dr. Salmo Raskin
Centro de Aconselhamento e Laboratorio Genetika
80730-150
Phone: 55 41 32326838
Fax: 55 41 32325206
E-mail: genetika@genetika.com.br
RESUMO
Contexto: Sindrome de Rett (RS) é uma doença pan-étnica de fenótipo bastante variado desde que foram identificadas mutações no gene MECP2 e um número maior de pacientes tem sido diagnosticadas. Existe uma demanda por estudos que investiguem a relação genótipo-fenotipo.
Objetivo: Descrever dois casos brasileiros de RS com mutações identificadas.
Pacientes e Métodos: Duas pacientes brasileiras com diagnóstico clínico-molecular de RS foram descritas buscando-se correlacionar genótipo-fenótipo.
Resultados: Ambas pacientes apresentaram regressão aos 2-3 anos de idade, movimentos esteriotipados de mãos, retraimento social e desaceleração do crescimento encefálico. Ambas apresentaram déficit de comunicação verbal. Caso 1 também apresentou perda dos movimentos manuais intencionados e crises convulsivas graves. Caso 2 apresentou-se com comprometimento parcial dos movimentos manuais e sem história de crise convulsiva. As mutações distintas, D97Y e R294X, foram encontradas respectivamente em exons 3 e 4 do gene MECP2.
Conclusão: A investigacao de mutações no gene MECP2 é importante na confirmação diagnóstica, investigação genótipo-fenótipo, e aconselhamento genético
PALAVRAS-CHAVES: Síndrome de Rett, MECP2, mutação, Brasil
ABSTRACT
Background: Rett syndrome (RS) is recognized as a pan-ethnic condition. Since the identification of mutations in the MECP2 gene, more patients have been diagnosed, and a broad spectrum of phenotypes has been reported. There is a lack of phenotype-genotype studies.
Objective: To describe two cases of Brazilian patients with identified MECP2 mutations.
Patients and methods: We present two female Brazilian patients with RS.
Results: Both patients presented with regression at 2-3 years of age, when stereotypic hand movements, social withdrawal and postnatal deceleration of head growth rate were observed. Both patients presented verbal communication impairment. Case 1 had loss of purposeful hand movements, and severe seizure episodes. Case 2 had milder impairment of purposeful hand movements, and no seizures. They had different mutations, D97Y and R294X, found in exons 3 and 4 of MECP2 gene, respectively.
Conclusion: Testing for MECP2 mutations is important to confirm diagnosis and to establish genotype/phenotype correlations, and improve genetic counseling.
KEYWORDS: genotype-phenotype correlation in Rett; MECP2 mutations; Brazilian cases
INTRODUCTION
Rett syndrome (RS), a neurodevelopmental disorder predominantly affecting young females, was first described as a clinical entity by Rett in 1966 1. However it was not internationally recognized until 1983, when Hagberg and colleagues 2 reported the clinical features of 35 young female patients with RS in Sweden, France and Portugal in the first English language publication.
This syndrome is one of the most common causes of mental retardation in girls, and its prevalence rate is estimated between
Despite the effort to delineate the clinical presentation of RS, before 1999, there was no known biochemical, morphological or genetic marker for RS, so the diagnosis of any case not fulfilling all the clinical criteria was uncertain. In 1999, Amir et al 6 identified the first mutations on MECP2 in patients with classic and non-classic forms of RS. The MECP2 gene is located at Xq28, and encodes the methyl-CpG-binding protein 2, which expression predominates in brain, fibroblast and lymphoblast cells 7. There were a series of confirmatory studies 8-11 detecting mutations in the MECP2 gene in RS patients from different countries.
According to some studies 8, 10, MECP2 mutations can be found in more than 80% of females with RS. One study found that only 50% of non-familial cases had a band shift on a first screening using single strand conformation polymorphism, but subsequent sequencing the MECP2 gene in the remainder cases detected mutations in a further six, giving a total of 72% of cases with defined MECP2 mutations 12. A review article by the same group 13 showed that the detection rate depends upon several methodological factors, such as the accuracy of the original diagnosis and use of preliminary detection tests. Another review paper 14 indicated that only small proportions (~5-10%) of clinically well-defined RS patients do not have detectable MECP2 mutations. Although
The syndrome is widely identified among different continental groups, including Brazilians. Rosemberg et al. 15 were the first to describe a girl with RS in
METHODS
Two female patients (current age 20 years and 5 years), with chronic encephalopathy and clinical suspicion of RS, were referred for molecular genetics analysis. The patients had a neurodevelopmental syndrome and no pre, peri or neonatal abnormalities. Written informed consent was obtained from the parents, including a specific consent for the publication of photos. Informed consent was obtained from the parents
Phenotypic analysis
Phenotypic data was collected from a combination of sources, including parental report, physical examination and medical records. Patients underwent detailed anamnesis, complete physical examination and laboratory investigation. Complementary analysis included electroencephalogram, brain computerized tomography scan, chromosome analysis, screening tests for inborn errors of metabolism, X-rays of the vertebral column, and sequencing analysis of the MECP2 gene. Diagnostic criteria for classical and atypical RS, as proposed by The Rett Syndrome Diagnostic Criteria Work Group 17, were used.
DNA was extracted from peripheral blood, as described previously 18. Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) amplification of genomic DNA and automated fluorescence sequencing of the 3 coding exons of the MECP2 gene, exons 2, 3 and 4, were done. Both strands were sequenced on an ABI automated sequencer, as previously published 19.
RESULTS
Phenotype Analysis
Case 1
Patient 1 is a 20-year-old girl diagnosed with RS when she was 2 years old. She was born at term by C-section because the mother had two previous C-sections. Her mother reported a small amount of bleeding during the fifth week of pregnancy. There were no other complications during the prenatal period, and the perinatal period was normal. APGAR score was
During her physical examination, the patient was agitated, irritable and screaming constantly. Her height was
Imaging studies were performed. Results of her brain CT scan were normal. The EEG showed abnormal activities compatible with Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome. Molecular analysis of MECP2 gene showed a heterozygous D97Y mutation in exon 3.
Case 2
Patient 2 is a 5-year-old girl born at term by C-section. She has two healthy brothers and one healthy sister. There was no history of complications during the perinatal period; however her mother took heparin because of a thrombotic event during a previous pregnancy. APGAR scores were
Current physical examination showed poor eye contact, OFC
Auxiliary tests were performed. Results of audiometric test at 9 months and 3 years old and fundoscopy were normal. Hormone levels including TSH, T4, cortisol, GH-RH were normal. Results of metabolic screening in urine and plasma were normal.
In order to facilitate the comparison between the two cases, clinical features of both cases are summarized in Table 1.
Mutation Analysis
The two patients had different mutations n the MECP2 gene, D97Y and R294X. Details of the mutations found and its consequences are described in the Discussion.
DISCUSSION
The clinical presentation of both our patients is consistent with the diagnostic criteria proposed in 1998 by the Rett Syndrome Diagnostic Criteria Workgroup 17. Both patients presented the minimum criteria: mental deficiency, autism-like manifestations, normal early postnatal nervous system development, and communication dysfunction. Microcephaly, although common, is not an essential criterion, as observed in our case 2. As with both our patients, the disorder is usually recognized between 6 to 18 months in girls who have a plateau in developmental progress followed by a loss of purposeful hand skills that coincide with the onset of hand stereotypes, the hallmark behavioral manifestations of RS 2, 4, 5.
A normal perinatal history is another hallmark of RS. In mice, Mecp2 deficiency affects the stability of mature neurons but not brain development. Mice that had an Mecp2 deficiency were normal at birth (like our patients), but after a delay of several weeks, the first symptoms occurred, similar to the course of our patients 20.
Molecular genetic analysis enabled us to confirm the diagnosis of RS in the absence of some characteristic symptoms and even in the presence of uncharacteristic features, such as the absence of head growth deceleration, seizure and gait abnormalities seen in the patient described as Case 2. Our cases suggest that the diagnosis of RS should not be dismissed because some characteristic features are absent or because some uncharacteristic symptoms are present. Indeed, a study that evaluated 120 females clinically diagnosed with RS, found a broad spectrum of signs and symptoms related to their mutations in the MECP2 gene 21.
According to the international diagnostic criteria, epilepsy is considered as secondary or supportive criteria 17. As described in Case 1, various types of seizures usually coexist in the same patient and appear between 2 and 5 years, are not influenced by sleep or wakefulness, and their resistance to antiepileptic drugs is not uncommon 22. Taking this clinical parameter into account, it is possible that Case 2 may develop seizures in the future.
Predictable clinical parameters are useful for counseling and therapy planning. For instance, the worry of parents of children who never had a period of regression that the regression is still to come could be relieved by the information that loss of hand function or language rarely happens after 4 years of age, according to international literature of RS. Our report of two Brazilian patients is consistent with this information. Nevertheless, according to Huppke et al 21, there seems to be a certain period of time during which girls with RS learn to sit, walk and speak, and if these activities are not achieved during this time they will not be achieved at all. None of their patients learned to sit after the age of 30 months, speak after the age of 36 months, or walk after the age of 48 months, despite receiving physiotherapy and occupational therapy. These standards need to be double checked and better analyzed, and these limitations taken into account so that realistic goals for these therapies are set to avoid frustrating RS patients, therapists and parents.
More than 300 different causal mutations have been identified in cases of RS, including a wide range of missense, nonsense, and frameshift mutations, which can be accessed at the mutation database Rettbase 23. Because so
Case 1 is the third RS patient reported in the literature with the mutation D97Y. This mutation was first reported in 2001 25 as a missense mutation causing a replacement of a conserved aspartic acid for tyrosine. The mutation is located in the methyl-CpG-binding domain (MBD) 26. The same mutation was reported one year later in a Korean study 11. This study described relevant phenotypic variations in different persons with identical mutations in MECP2. Although it was not possible to establish a clear phenotype-genotype correlation in this Korean study, there was a tendency for patients with no detected MECP2 mutation (30% in this study) to show more severe symptoms than patients with detected mutations. Their data also suggests that not only the type, but also the position of the mutation influences the phenotype. Furthermore, these findings suggest that different mechanisms are implicated in the phenotype.
The mutation found in our Case 2 patient (nonsense mutation R294X), was also previously described 27 and is the fifth most common mutation in Rett Syndrome patients, with a frequency of 5,6%, according to the Rettbase 23. It is localized in the transcriptional repression domain (TRD) and results in a premature stop codon at position 294. The TRD interacts with the co-repressor Sin3A and histone deacetylases 28. Analyzing correlations between this MECP2 mutations and the development of language, Yamashita et al. 27 found preserved speech in patients with R294X, which was also observed in our patient, who maintained the ability to babble.
The lack of family history for similar cases in our two patients is consistent with the fact that RS often occurs sporadically. In approximately 95% of patients de novo mutations in the MECP2 gene occur; in most cases, they are of paternal origin 29.
In summary, this report describes the clinical and etiological features of two Brazilian cases of RS with mutations in the MECP2 gene. Our analysis of MECP2 mutations and their relation to the clinical presentation of RS has relevance for many aspects of genetic counseling and for genotype-phenotype correlations of patients with RS.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors thank both families and patients who participated in this study, and their physicians for their assistance.
TABLES
Clinical characteristics |
Case 1 |
Case 2 |
Apparently normal prenatal and perinatal period |
+ |
+ |
Apparently normal development for the first six months of life |
+ |
+ |
Postnatal deceleration of head growth rate |
+ |
|
Decrease (D) or Loss (L) of purposeful hand skills |
L |
D |
Communication dysfunction |
+ |
+ |
Social withdrawal |
+ |
+ |
Psychomotor impairment |
+ |
|
Hand Stereotypes |
+ |
+ |
Hand Washing/Wringing |
+ |
|
Hand Mouthing |
|
+ |
Impaired (I) or Absent (A) locomotion |
I |
|
Features of the autistic spectrum disorders: poor eye contact, severely limited socialization |
+ |
+ |
Clinical seizures |
+ |
|
EEG abnormalities |
+ |
|
Use of anti-convulsive |
+ |
|
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