A atrofia cerebral e cerebelar infantil com microcefalia progressiva pós-natal é uma síndrome rara de má-formação do sistema nervoso central que afeta crianças. Ela se caracteriza por uma cabeça que fica progressivamente menor após o nascimento (microcefalia), atraso significativo no desenvolvimento dos movimentos e deficiência intelectual. A condição também está associada a músculos muito rígidos (hipertonia e espasticidade), movimentos involuntários repetitivos (clônus) e convulsões. Exames de imagem do cérebro revelam uma atrofia grave (diminuição do tamanho) do cérebro e do cerebelo, além de pouca formação da mielina, que é a camada protetora dos nervos.
Introdução
O que você precisa saber de cara
A atrofia cerebral e cerebelar infantil com microcefalia progressiva pós-natal é uma síndrome rara de má-formação do sistema nervoso central que afeta crianças. Ela se caracteriza por uma cabeça que fica progressivamente menor após o nascimento (microcefalia), atraso significativo no desenvolvimento dos movimentos e deficiência intelectual. A condição também está associada a músculos muito rígidos (hipertonia e espasticidade), movimentos involuntários repetitivos (clônus) e convulsões. Exames de imagem do cérebro revelam uma atrofia grave (diminuição do tamanho) do cérebro e do cerebelo, além de pouca formação da mielina, que é a camada protetora dos nervos.
Escala de raridade
<1/50kMuito rara
1/20kRara
1/10kPouco freq.
1/5kIncomum
1/2k
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Sinais e sintomas
O que aparece no corpo e com que frequência cada sintoma acontece
Partes do corpo afetadas
+ 7 sintomas em outras categorias
Características mais comuns
Os sintomas variam de pessoa para pessoa. Abaixo estão as 18 características clínicas mais associadas, ordenadas por frequência.
Linha do tempo da pesquisa
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Genética e causas
O que está alterado no DNA e como passa nas famílias
Genes associados
1 gene identificado com associação a esta condição. Padrão de herança: Autosomal recessive.
Component of the Mediator complex, a coactivator involved in the regulated transcription of nearly all RNA polymerase II-dependent genes. Mediator functions as a bridge to convey information from gene-specific regulatory proteins to the basal RNA polymerase II transcription machinery. Mediator is recruited to promoters by direct interactions with regulatory proteins and serves as a scaffold for the assembly of a functional preinitiation complex with RNA polymerase II and the general transcriptio
Nucleus
Microcephaly, postnatal progressive, with seizures and brain atrophy
A disorder characterized by postnatal progressive microcephaly and severe developmental retardation associated with cerebral and cerebellar atrophy. Infants manifest swallowing difficulties leading to failure to thrive, jitteriness, poor visual fixation, truncal arching, seizures. There is no acquisition of developmental milestones and patients suffer from marked spasticity and profound retardation. Progressive microcephaly becomes evident few months after birth.
Variantes genéticas (ClinVar)
117 variantes patogênicas registradas no ClinVar.
Classificação de variantes (ClinVar)
Distribuição de 141 variantes classificadas pelo ClinVar.
Vias biológicas (Reactome)
5 vias biológicas associadas aos genes desta condição.
Diagnóstico
Os sinais que médicos procuram e os exames que confirmam
Tratamento e manejo
Remédios, cuidados de apoio e o que precisa acompanhar
Onde tratar no SUS
Hospitais de referência no Brasil e o protocolo oficial do SUS (PCDT)
🇧🇷 Atendimento SUS — Atrofia cerebral e cerebelosa da infância com microcefalia pós-natal progressiva
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Dados de DATASUS/CNES, SBGM, ABNeuro e Ministério da Saúde. Sempre confirme a disponibilidade diretamente com o estabelecimento.
Pesquisa ativa
Ensaios clínicos abertos e novidades científicas recentes
Pesquisa e ensaios clínicos
Nenhum ensaio clínico registrado para esta condição.
Publicações mais relevantes
Clinical and genetic characterization of a progressive RBL2-associated neurodevelopmental disorder.
Retinoblastoma (RB) proteins are highly conserved transcriptional regulators that play important roles during development by regulating cell-cycle gene expression. RBL2 dysfunction has been linked to a severe neurodevelopmental disorder. However, to date, clinical features have been described in only six individuals carrying five biallelic predicted loss-of-function (pLOF) variants. To define the phenotypic effects of RBL2 mutations in detail, we identified and clinically characterized a cohort of 35 patients from 20 families carrying pLOF variants in RBL2, including 15 new variants that substantially broaden the molecular spectrum. The clinical presentation of affected individuals is characterized by a range of neurological and developmental abnormalities. Global developmental delay and intellectual disability were observed uniformly, ranging from moderate to profound and involving lack of acquisition of key motor and speech milestones in most patients. Disrupted sleep was also evident in some patients. Frequent features included postnatal microcephaly, infantile hypotonia, aggressive behaviour, stereotypic movements, seizures and non-specific dysmorphic features. Neuroimaging features included cerebral atrophy, white matter volume loss, corpus callosum hypoplasia and cerebellar atrophy. In parallel, we used the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, to investigate how disruption of the conserved RBL2 orthologue Rbf impacts nervous system function and development. We found that Drosophila Rbf LOF mutants recapitulate several features of patients harbouring RBL2 variants, including developmental delay, alterations in head and brain morphology, locomotor defects and perturbed sleep. Surprisingly, in addition to its known role in controlling tissue growth during development, we found that continued Rbf expression is also required in fully differentiated post-mitotic neurons for normal locomotion in Drosophila, and that adult-stage neuronal re-expression of Rbf is sufficient to rescue Rbf mutant locomotor defects. Taken together, our study provides a clinical and experimental basis to understand genotype-phenotype correlations in an RBL2-linked neurodevelopmental disorder and suggests that restoring RBL2 expression through gene therapy approaches might ameliorate some symptoms caused by RBL2 pLOF.
Clinical and neurogenetic characterisation of autosomal recessive RBL2-associated progressive neurodevelopmental disorder.
Retinoblastoma (RB) proteins are highly conserved transcriptional regulators that play important roles during development by regulating cell-cycle gene expression. RBL2 dysfunction has been linked to a severe neurodevelopmental disorder. However, to date, clinical features have only been described in six individuals carrying five biallelic predicted loss of function (pLOF) variants. To define the phenotypic effects of RBL2 mutations in detail, we identified and clinically characterized a cohort of 28 patients from 18 families carrying LOF variants in RBL2 , including fourteen new variants that substantially broaden the molecular spectrum. The clinical presentation of affected individuals is characterized by a range of neurological and developmental abnormalities. Global developmental delay and intellectual disability were uniformly observed, ranging from moderate to profound and involving lack of acquisition of key motor and speech milestones in most patients. Frequent features included postnatal microcephaly, infantile hypotonia, aggressive behaviour, stereotypic movements and non-specific dysmorphic features. Common neuroimaging features were cerebral atrophy, white matter volume loss, corpus callosum hypoplasia and cerebellar atrophy. In parallel, we used the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster , to investigate how disruption of the conserved RBL2 orthologueue Rbf impacts nervous system function and development. We found that Drosophila Rbf LOF mutants recapitulate several features of patients harboring RBL2 variants, including alterations in the head and brain morphology reminiscent of microcephaly, and perturbed locomotor behaviour. Surprisingly, in addition to its known role in controlling tissue growth during development, we find that continued Rbf expression is also required in fully differentiated post-mitotic neurons for normal locomotion in Drosophila , and that adult-stage neuronal re-expression of Rbf is sufficient to rescue Rbf mutant locomotor defects. Taken together, this study provides a clinical and experimental basis to understand genotype-phenotype correlations in an RBL2 -linked neurodevelopmental disorder and suggests that restoring RBL2 expression through gene therapy approaches may ameliorate aspects of RBL2 LOF patient symptoms.
The genotypic and phenotypic spectrum of PARS2-related infantile-onset encephalopathy.
Mitochondrial aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (mt-aaRSs) are a family of enzymes that play critical roles in protein biosynthesis. Mutations in mt-aaRSs are associated with various diseases. As a member of the mt-aaRS family, PARS2 encoding prolyl-tRNA synthetase 2 was recently shown to be associated with Alpers syndrome and certain infantile-onset neurodegenerative disorders in four patients. Here, we present two patients in a pedigree with early developmental delay, epileptic spasms, delayed myelination combined with cerebellar white matter abnormalities, and progressive cortical atrophy. Whole-exome sequencing revealed pathogenic compound heterozygous variants [c.283 G > A (p.95 V > I)] and [c.604 G > C (p.202 R > G)] in PARS2. Nearly all patients had epileptic spasms with early response to treatment, early developmental delay and/or regression followed by generalized hypotonia, postnatal microcephaly, elevated lactate levels, and progressive cerebral atrophy. Our study provides further evidence for validating the role of PARS2 in the pathology of related infantile-onset encephalopathy, contributing to the phenotypic features of this condition, and providing clinical and molecular insight for the diagnosis of this disease entity.
CCDC88A mutations cause PEHO-like syndrome in humans and mouse.
Progressive encephalopathy with oedema, hypsarrhythmia and optic atrophy (PEHO) syndrome is a rare Mendelian phenotype comprising severe retardation, early onset epileptic seizures, optic nerve/cerebellar atrophy, pedal oedema, and early death. Atypical cases are often known as PEHO-like, and there is an overlap with 'early infantile epileptic encephalopathy'. PEHO is considered to be recessive, but surprisingly since initial description in 1991, no causative recessive gene(s) have been described. Hence, we report a multiplex consanguineous family with the PEHO phenotype where affected individuals had a homozygous frame-shift deletion in CCDC88A (c.2313delT, p.Leu772*ter). Analysis of cDNA extracted from patient lymphocytes unexpectedly failed to show non-sense mediated decay, and we demonstrate that the mutation produces a truncated protein lacking the crucial C-terminal half of CCDC88A (girdin). To further investigate the possible role of CCDC88A in human neurodevelopment we re-examined the behaviour and neuroanatomy of Ccdc88a knockout pups. These mice had mesial-temporal lobe epilepsy, microcephaly and corpus callosum deficiency, and by postnatal Day 21, microcephaly; the mice died at an early age. As the mouse knockout phenotype mimics the human PEHO phenotype this suggests that loss of CCDC88A is a cause of the PEHO phenotype, and that CCDC88A is essential for multiple aspects of normal human neurodevelopment.
📚 EuropePMCmostrando 4
Clinical and genetic characterization of a progressive RBL2-associated neurodevelopmental disorder.
Brain : a journal of neurologyClinical and neurogenetic characterisation of autosomal recessive RBL2-associated progressive neurodevelopmental disorder.
medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciencesThe genotypic and phenotypic spectrum of PARS2-related infantile-onset encephalopathy.
Journal of human geneticsCCDC88A mutations cause PEHO-like syndrome in humans and mouse.
Brain : a journal of neurologyAssociações
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Comunidades
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Referências e fontes
Bases de dados externas citadas neste artigo
Publicações científicas
Artigos indexados no PubMed ligados a esta doença no grafo RarasNet — título, periódico e PMID direto da fonte, sem intermediação de IA.
- Clinical and genetic characterization of a progressive RBL2-associated neurodevelopmental disorder.
- Clinical and neurogenetic characterisation of autosomal recessive RBL2-associated progressive neurodevelopmental disorder.
- The genotypic and phenotypic spectrum of PARS2-related infantile-onset encephalopathy.
- CCDC88A mutations cause PEHO-like syndrome in humans and mouse.
Bases de dados e fontes oficiais
Identificadores e referências canônicas usadas para montar este verbete.
- ORPHA:402364(Orphanet)
- OMIM OMIM:613668(OMIM)
- MONDO:0013351(MONDO)
- GARD:10995(GARD (NIH))
- Variantes catalogadas(ClinVar)
- Q55784025(Wikidata)
Dados compilados pelo RarasNet a partir de fontes abertas (Orphanet, OMIM, MONDO, PubMed/EuropePMC, ClinicalTrials.gov, DATASUS, PCDT/MS). Este conteúdo é informativo e não substitui avaliação médica.
Conteúdo mantido por Agente Raras · Médicos e pesquisadores podem colaborar