The incidence of movement disorder increases with age and contrasts with subtle and limited neuroimaging abnormalities in argininosuccinic aciduria

Author:

Gurung Sonam1,Karamched Saketh2,Perocheau Dany1,Seunarine Kiran K.1,Baldwin Tom1,Alrashidi Haya1,Touramanidou Loukia1,Duff Claire1,Elkhateeb Nour34,Stepien Karolina M.5,Sharma Reena5,Morris Andrew6,Hartley Thomas6,Crowther Laura6,Grunewald Stephanie3,Cleary Maureen3,Mundy Helen7,Chakrapani Anupam3,Batzios Spyros3,Davison James3,Footitt Emma3,Tuschl Karin3,Lachmann Robin8,Murphy Elaine8,Santra Saikat9,Uudelepp Mari‐Liis3,Yeo Mildrid3,Finn Patrick F.10,Cavedon Alex10,Siddiqui Summar10,Rice Lisa10,Martini Paolo G. V.10,Frassetto Andrea10,Heales Simon1,Mills Philippa B.1,Gissen Paul1311,Clayden Jonathan D.1,Clark Christopher A.1,Eaton Simon1,Kalber Tammy L.2,Baruteau Julien1311ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health University College London London UK

2. Centre for Advanced Biomedical Imaging University College London London UK

3. Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Trust London UK

4. Department of Clinical Genetics Cambridge University Hospitals Cambridge UK

5. Mark Holland Metabolic Unit, Adult Inherited Metabolic Diseases Department Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust Salford UK

6. Willink Unit Manchester Centre for Genomic Medicine Manchester UK

7. Evelina London Children's Hospital, St Thomas's Hospital London UK

8. Charles Dent Metabolic Unit National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery London UK

9. Clinical IMD Birmingham Children's Hospital Birmingham UK

10. Moderna, Inc. Cambridge Massachusetts USA

11. National Institute of Health Research Great Ormond Street Biomedical Research Centre London UK

Abstract

AbstractArgininosuccinate lyase (ASL) is integral to the urea cycle detoxifying neurotoxic ammonia and the nitric oxide (NO) biosynthesis cycle. Inherited ASL deficiency causes argininosuccinic aciduria (ASA), a rare disease with hyperammonemia and NO deficiency. Patients present with developmental delay, epilepsy and movement disorder, associated with NO‐mediated downregulation of central catecholamine biosynthesis. A neurodegenerative phenotype has been proposed in ASA. To better characterise this neurodegenerative phenotype in ASA, we conducted a retrospective study in six paediatric and adult metabolic centres in the UK in 2022. We identified 60 patients and specifically looked for neurodegeneration‐related symptoms: movement disorder such as ataxia, tremor and dystonia, hypotonia/fatigue and abnormal behaviour. We analysed neuroimaging with diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in an individual with ASA with movement disorders. We assessed conventional and DTI MRI alongside single photon emission computer tomography (SPECT) with dopamine analogue radionuclide 123I‐ioflupane, in Asl‐deficient mice treated by hASL mRNA with normalised ureagenesis. Movement disorders in ASA appear in the second and third decades of life, becoming more prevalent with ageing and independent from the age of onset of hyperammonemia. Neuroimaging can show abnormal DTI features affecting both grey and white matter, preferentially basal ganglia. ASA mouse model with normalised ureagenesis did not recapitulate these DTI findings and showed normal 123I‐ioflupane SPECT and cerebral dopamine metabolomics. Altogether these findings support the pathophysiology of a late‐onset movement disorder with cell‐autonomous functional central catecholamine dysregulation but without or limited neurodegeneration of dopaminergic neurons, making these symptoms amenable to targeted therapy.

Funder

NIHR Great Ormond Street Hospital Biomedical Research Centre

Moderna

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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