RESUMO
GM2 and GM1 gangliosidoses are genetic, neurodegenerative lysosomal sphingolipid storage disorders. The earlier the age of onset, the more severe the clinical presentation and progression, with infantile, juvenile and late-onset presentations broadly delineated into separate phenotypic subtypes. Gene and substrate reduction therapies, both of which act directly on sphingolipidosis are entering clinical trials for treatment of these disorders. Simple to use biomarkers for disease monitoring are urgently required to support and expedite these clinical trials. Here, lysosphingolipid and protein biomarkers of sphingolipidosis and neuropathology respectively, were assessed in plasma samples from 33 GM2 gangliosidosis patients, 13 GM1 gangliosidosis patients, and compared to 66 controls. LysoGM2 and lysoGM1 were detectable in 31/33 GM2 gangliosidosis and 12/13 GM1 gangliosidosis patient samples respectively, but not in any controls. Levels of the axonal damage marker Neurofilament light (NF-L) were highly elevated in both GM2 and GM1 gangliosidosis patient plasma samples, with no overlap with controls. Levels of the astrocytosis biomarker Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) were also elevated in samples from both patient populations, albeit with some overlap with controls. In GM2 gangliosidosis patient plasma NF-L, Tau, GFAP and lysoGM2 were all most highly elevated in infantile onset patients, indicating a relationship to severity and phenotype. Plasma NF-L and liver lysoGM2 were also elevated in a GM2 gangliosidosis mouse model, and were lowered by treatment with a drug that slowed disease progression. These results indicate that lysosphingolipids and NF-L/GFAP have potential to monitor pharmacodynamics and pathogenic processes respectively in GM2 and GM1 gangliosidoses patients.
RESUMO
Niemann-Pick disease Type C (NPC) is a rare autosomal recessive neurovisceral lysosomal disorder. Perinatal and early infantile onset NPC are the most severe types of the disease. Early infantile type is characterized by a rapidly progressive neurodegenerative course, which entails significant morbidity and usually results in death within 5 years. Miglustat, an iminosugar that selectively inhibits the glycosylceramide synthase enzyme, is known to stabilize or delay neurological progression in individuals with NPC, but its impact on affected infants is yet to be elucidated. We present two siblings with early infantile NPC due to the previously reported devastating homozygous mutation c.2279_2281delTCT in NPC1. Their considerably discrepant neurological disease courses were dependent on the timing of initiation of miglustat treatment. The outcomes support the significant role of early treatment with miglustat in the disease course of early infantile NPC and suggest that therapy should be considered even before the occurrence of neurological involvement. Moreover, this report emphasizes the importance of early diagnosis, in light of the availability of a potential disease-modifying medication.