Abstract

BackgroundIt has been reported that oxidation product of cholesterol, 7-ketocholesterol, increases in plasma of patients with NP-C. Previously, we established a rapid test to determine the plasma 7-ketocholesterol level and found it elevated significantly in patients with acid sphingomyelinase deficient NPD and NP-C disease.MethodsIndividuals randomly referred to our outpatient clinics in the past two years for hepatosplenomegaly or isolated splenomegaly, who have been excluded as acid sphingomyelinase deficient NPD or Gaucher disease, and individuals with newborn cholestasis, psychomotor regression/retardation, were screened for plasma 7-ketocholesterol level. Individuals with high 7-ketocholesterol level were then analyzed for NPC1 and NPC2 gene mutation to confirm the accuracy of NP-C diagnosis.ResultsBy screening the plasma 7-ketocholesterol of suspect individuals, 12 out of 302 (4%) had shown remarkable high levels compared with reference. All these twelve individuals were subsequently confirmed to be NP-C by DNA analysis of NPC1 and NPC2 genes, with the early infantile form (n = 7), the late infantile form (n = 1), the juvenile form (n = 1) and the adult form (n = 1). Furthermore, two NP-C patients without observable neuropsychiatric disability were picked up through this procedure. Only one patient had NP-C due to NPC2 gene mutations, with the rest due to NPC1 gene mutations. We found that in NP-C patients AST was usually mildly elevated and ALT was in a normal range when jaundice was not present. In total, 22 mutant alleles were identified in the NPC1 gene, including six novel small deletions/insertions, e.g., c.416_417insC, c.1030delT, c.1800delC, c.2230_2231delGT, c.2302_2303insG, and c.2795dupA; seven novel exonic point mutations, c.1502A>T (p.D501V), c.1553G>A (p.R518Q), c.1832A>G (p.D611G), c.2054T>C (p.I685T), c.2128C>T(p.Q710X), c.2177G>C (p.R726T), c.2366G>A (p.R789H), and one novel intronic mutation c.2912-3C>G. Small deletions/insertions constituted nearly half of the mutant alleles (10/22, 45%), indicating a unique mutation spectrum in this cohort of Chinese NP-C patients.ConclusionOur data confirm in a clinical setting that screening plasma 7-ketocholesterol is an efficient and practical diagnostic tool to identify NP-C patients from suspect individuals. Patients without neuropsychological involvement could also be identified by this method therefore allowing an opportunity for earlier treatment.

Highlights

  • Niemann-Pick disease type C (NP-C, OMIM 257220, 607625) is a rare autosomal recessive disease belonging to the family of lysosomal storage disorders

  • With or without hepatosplenomegaly/hepatomegaly/splenomegaly were classified to group A; Individuals with hepatosplenomegaly/hepatomegaly/splenomegaly with or without a history of newborn jaundice were classified to group B; Individuals with hepatosplenomegaly/hepatomegaly/splenomegaly followed by psychomotor regression/retardation were classified to group B; patients dominated with psychomotor regression/retardation, without palpable hepatosplenomegaly were classified to group C

  • The highest 7-KC value in the non-NP-C group is 30.8 ng/ml, very close to the lowest 7-KC value (32 ng/ml, patient 10) in the NP-C patients. This was an infant with cholestatic jaundice without confirmed diagnosis, who was later excluded as NP-C or a heterozygote of NPC1/NPC2 gene by molecular analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Niemann-Pick disease type C (NP-C, OMIM 257220, 607625) is a rare autosomal recessive disease belonging to the family of lysosomal storage disorders. The other is a small lysosomal soluble protein NPC2 [3], which functions in concert with NPC1 [4]. Defects of these two proteins result in sequestration of mainly unesterified cholesterol, as well as other sphingolipids in the late endosomes/lysosomes at the cellular level, leading to a clinical neurovisceral manifestation characterized by hepatosplenomegaly and severe progressive neurological dysfunction, which includes vertical supranuclear gaze palsy, ataxia, dystonia, dysarthria, dysphagia, gelastic cataplexy, and epileptic seizures. We established a rapid test to determine the plasma 7-ketocholesterol level and found it elevated significantly in patients with acid sphingomyelinase deficient NPD and NP-C disease

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