Multiple Mitochondrial Dysfunctions Syndrome 4 Due to Gene Defects: A Review

Multiple mitochondrial dysfunctions syndrome 4, caused by ISCA2 gene defects (OMIM #616370), was first described by Al-Hassnan et al in 2015. To date, 20 cases have been reported: 13 females and 7 males from 18 different families. All cases are from Saudi Arabia except those from one Italian family....

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Main Author: Majid Alfadhel MD, MHSc, FCCMG
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-05-01
Series:Child Neurology Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2329048X19847377
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spelling doaj-d931493222b24caea0534cf33cc356832020-11-25T02:34:07ZengSAGE PublishingChild Neurology Open2329-048X2019-05-01610.1177/2329048X19847377Multiple Mitochondrial Dysfunctions Syndrome 4 Due to Gene Defects: A ReviewMajid Alfadhel MD, MHSc, FCCMG0 Division of Genetics, Department of Pediatrics, King Abdullah International Medical Research Centre, King Saud bin Abdulaziz University for Health Sciences, King Abdulaziz Medical City, Ministry of National Guard-Health Affairs (NGHA), Riyadh, Saudi ArabiaMultiple mitochondrial dysfunctions syndrome 4, caused by ISCA2 gene defects (OMIM #616370), was first described by Al-Hassnan et al in 2015. To date, 20 cases have been reported: 13 females and 7 males from 18 different families. All cases are from Saudi Arabia except those from one Italian family. Typically, the patients have normal antenatal and birth history and attain normal development initially. Rapid deterioration occurs between 2 and 7 months of age, with the triad of neurodevelopmental regression, optic atrophy with nystagmus, and diffuse white matter disease. Magnetic resonance imaging findings include 75% of patients have cerebellar white matter abnormalities, and the spinal cord was affected in 55%. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy showed elevated glycine peaks in 2 (10%) cases and elevated lactate peaks in 5 (25%) cases. Biochemical abnormalities include high cerebrospinal fluid glycine and lactate and high plasma glycine and lactate, but these findings were not consistent. Diagnosis is based on the detection of biallelic mutations in the ISCA2 gene. To date, no curative treatment has been discovered, and disease management is exclusively supportive. In this report, the authors review the published cases of ISCA2 gene defects and retrospectively characterize disease phenotypes, the affected biochemical pathways, neuroradiological abnormalities, diagnosis, genetics, and treatment.https://doi.org/10.1177/2329048X19847377
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Majid Alfadhel MD, MHSc, FCCMG
spellingShingle Majid Alfadhel MD, MHSc, FCCMG
Multiple Mitochondrial Dysfunctions Syndrome 4 Due to Gene Defects: A Review
Child Neurology Open
author_facet Majid Alfadhel MD, MHSc, FCCMG
author_sort Majid Alfadhel MD, MHSc, FCCMG
title Multiple Mitochondrial Dysfunctions Syndrome 4 Due to Gene Defects: A Review
title_short Multiple Mitochondrial Dysfunctions Syndrome 4 Due to Gene Defects: A Review
title_full Multiple Mitochondrial Dysfunctions Syndrome 4 Due to Gene Defects: A Review
title_fullStr Multiple Mitochondrial Dysfunctions Syndrome 4 Due to Gene Defects: A Review
title_full_unstemmed Multiple Mitochondrial Dysfunctions Syndrome 4 Due to Gene Defects: A Review
title_sort multiple mitochondrial dysfunctions syndrome 4 due to gene defects: a review
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Child Neurology Open
issn 2329-048X
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Multiple mitochondrial dysfunctions syndrome 4, caused by ISCA2 gene defects (OMIM #616370), was first described by Al-Hassnan et al in 2015. To date, 20 cases have been reported: 13 females and 7 males from 18 different families. All cases are from Saudi Arabia except those from one Italian family. Typically, the patients have normal antenatal and birth history and attain normal development initially. Rapid deterioration occurs between 2 and 7 months of age, with the triad of neurodevelopmental regression, optic atrophy with nystagmus, and diffuse white matter disease. Magnetic resonance imaging findings include 75% of patients have cerebellar white matter abnormalities, and the spinal cord was affected in 55%. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy showed elevated glycine peaks in 2 (10%) cases and elevated lactate peaks in 5 (25%) cases. Biochemical abnormalities include high cerebrospinal fluid glycine and lactate and high plasma glycine and lactate, but these findings were not consistent. Diagnosis is based on the detection of biallelic mutations in the ISCA2 gene. To date, no curative treatment has been discovered, and disease management is exclusively supportive. In this report, the authors review the published cases of ISCA2 gene defects and retrospectively characterize disease phenotypes, the affected biochemical pathways, neuroradiological abnormalities, diagnosis, genetics, and treatment.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2329048X19847377
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