Abstract

Alström syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive genetic disorder characterized by cone-rod dystrophy, hearing loss, childhood truncal obesity, insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia, type 2 diabetes, hypertriglyceridemia, short stature in adulthood, cardiomyopathy, and progressive pulmonary, hepatic, and renal dysfunction. Symptoms first appear in infancy and progressive development of multi-organ pathology leads to a reduced life expectancy. Variability in age of onset and severity of clinical symptoms, even within families, is likely due to genetic background.Alström syndrome is caused by mutations in ALMS1, a large gene comprised of 23 exons and coding for a protein of 4,169 amino acids. In general, ALMS1 gene defects include insertions, deletions, and nonsense mutations leading to protein truncations and found primarily in exons 8, 10 and 16. Multiple alternate splice forms exist. ALMS1 protein is found in centrosomes, basal bodies, and cytosol of all tissues affected by the disease. The identification of ALMS1 as a ciliary protein explains the range of observed phenotypes and their similarity to those of other ciliopathies such as Bardet-Biedl syndrome.Studies involving murine and cellular models of Alström syndrome have provided insight into the pathogenic mechanisms underlying obesity and type 2 diabetes, and other clinical problems. Ultimately, research into the pathogenesis of Alström syndrome should lead to better management and treatments for individuals, and have potentially important ramifications for other rare ciliopathies, as well as more common causes of obesity and diabetes, and other conditions common in the general population.

Highlights

  • Alström syndrome (OMIM 203800) is a rare autosomal recessive genetic disorder, thought to have a prevalence of less than one per million in the general population

  • Alström syndrome encompasses cone-rod dystrophy in infancy, hearing loss, childhood truncal obesity, hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), hypertriglyceridemia, short stature in adulthood, dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), and progressive pulmonary, hepatic, and renal dysfunction

  • Knockdown of Alms1 in 3T3L1 cells showed impairment in adipocyte differentiation but does not appear to have an effect on cellautonomous insulin action [84]. These results suggest that partial impairment of adipogenesis in Alström syndrome may contribute to the severity of the associated metabolic phenotype

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Summary

Introduction

Alström syndrome (OMIM 203800) is a rare autosomal recessive genetic disorder, thought to have a prevalence of less than one per million in the general population. Alström syndrome encompasses cone-rod dystrophy in infancy, hearing loss, childhood truncal obesity, hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), hypertriglyceridemia, short stature in adulthood, dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), and progressive pulmonary, hepatic, and renal dysfunction. Since Alström syndrome is caused by mutations in the ALMS1 gene, molecular genetic analysis can be used to confirm the clinical diagnosis [5,6,7].

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