Clinical and Molecular Characteristics of Two Chinese Children with Infantile Sandhoff Disease and Review of the Literature.

J Mol Neurosci

Department of Neurology, Children's Hospital of Soochow University, No. 92 Zhongnan Street, Industrial Park, Suzhou, 215003, Jiangsu Province, People's Republic of China.

Published: April 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Infantile Sandhoff disease is a genetic disorder marked by symptoms like cherry red spots in the eye, muscle weakness, and developmental issues, caused by mutations in the HEXB gene.
  • A study investigated new variants of the HEXB gene in two Chinese families using exome sequencing, revealing three novel variants that affect protein structure.
  • The findings expand knowledge on HEXB gene variants across different ethnicities and highlight that standard cranial imaging may not always reflect the diagnosis of Sandhoff disease, informing future clinical management and genetic counseling.

Article Abstract

Infantile Sandhoff disease is an autosomal recessive inherited disease primarily characterized by cherry red spots in the retina, muscle weakness, seizure, truncal hypotonia, hyperacusis, developmental delay and regression. The pathogenic genetic defects of the HEXB gene, which encodes the β subunit of the hexosaminidase A (ɑβ) and hexosaminidase B (ββ) enzymes, cause deficiency of both the Hex A and Hex B enzymes, resulting in the deposition of GM2 ganglion glycerides in the lysosomes of the central nervous system and somatic cells. The aim of this study was to discover disease-causing variants of the HEXB gene in two Chinese families through the use of exome sequencing. By characterizing three novel variants by molecular genetics, bioinformatics analysis, and three-dimensional structure modeling, we showed that all these novel variants influenced the protein structure. The results broaden the variant spectrum of HEXB in different ethnic groups. Furthermore, not all patients diagnosed with infantile Sandhoff disease had characteristic cranial imaging findings, which can only be used as supplementary information for diagnosis. The results of this study may contribute to clinical management, genetic counseling, and gene-targeted treatments for Sandhoff disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12031-019-01409-6DOI Listing

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