Abstract

Our previous experience with abnormal fatty acid metabolism in several children with spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) prompted evaluation of fatty acid metabolism in a larger cohort. Thirty-three infants with severe infantile SMA were shown to have a significantly increased ratio of dodecanoic to tetradecanoic acid in plasma compared with normal infants and 6 infants affected with equally debilitating, non-SMA denervating disorders. Seventeen children with milder forms of SMA had normal fatty acid profiles. In addition, all 5 infants with severe SMA evaluated in a fasting state developed a distinctive and marked dicarboxylic aciduria, including saturated, unsaturated, and 3-hydroxy forms, comparable in severity with the dicarboxylic aciduria of children with primary defects of mitochondrial fatty acid beta-oxidation. Nine children with chronic SMA and 23 control patients did not develop an abnormal dicarboxylic aciduria during fasting. No known disorder of fatty acid metabolism explains all of the abnormalities we find in SMA. Our data suggest, however, that the abnormalities are not a consequence of SMA-related immobility, systemic illness, muscle denervation, or muscle atrophy. These abnormalities in fatty acid metabolism may be caused by changes in cellular physiology related to the molecular defects of the SMA-pathogenic survival motor neuron gene or neighboring genes.

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