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Rett syndrome

Rett syndrome (Rett syndrome, Rett's disorder) is a progressive neurological disorder. The symptoms of this disorder are easily confused with those of autism and cerebral palsy. The clinical diagnosis includes small head, hands, and feet. more...

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Stereotypical repetitive hand movements such as mouthing or wringing are also included. Girls are very prone to seizures, GI disorders, and are typically nonverbal. About 50% of the girls/women are ambulatory.

Etiology

Rett syndrome (symbolized RTT) is X-linked dominant, affecting almost exclusively girls. Development is normal until 1 year of age, when language and motor milestones regress and acquired microcephaly is seen. Hand wringing and sighing are characteristic, and they develop autistic behavior. Rett syndrome is usually caused by a mutation in the gene encoding methyl-CpG-binding protein-2 (MECP2). MECP2 is found on chromosome band Xq28, near the long end of the X chromosome. Rett syndrome can also be caused by a mutation to the gene encoding cyclin-dependent kinase-like 5 (CDKL5). Rett syndrome affects 1 in every 12,500 female live births.

Gender and Rett syndrome

Most individuals with Rett syndrome are female. One explanation given for this was that the genetic defect that caused Rett syndrome in females caused embryonic lethality in males (that is, males with pathogenic MECP2 mutations died before they were born). While a plausible hypothesis, more recent research has contradicted this explanation.

Most males with a pathogenic MECP2 mutation suffer from neonatal encephalopathy and die within a year or so of birth. Males who have two X chromosomes and a Y chromosome (often called Klinefelter's syndrome), one with a mutated MECP2 gene, follow a similar development path to females with Rett syndrome. Males who have somatic mosaicism also have symptoms like females with Rett syndrome.

Some researchers (for example Masuyama et al 2005) have reported cases of males with Rett syndrome who have a pathogenic MECP2 mutation but do not have a somatic mosaicism or an extra chromosome.

Unlike most genetic diseases, many cases of Rett syndrome involve spontaneous mutations in one of the parent’s gonads. It has been argued that one cause of the majority of Rett syndrome individuals being female is that mutations to MECP2 are possibly more common in male gonads than female gonads, and only females can inherit a mutated MECP2 gene from fathers (males inherit a Y chromosome from fathers, which does not contain a copy of MECP2).

Development and Symptoms

Infants typically develop normally up to age 6-18 months. Physioneurological development tends to plateau after this brief period of normal development, and is followed by deterioration of high brain functions. Psychomotor and cognitive abilities rapidly decline within 1-2 years of age. Symptoms that develop are autistic-like, with mental retardation and poor growth. It is, hence, easy for the misdiagnosis of Rett for autism, or cerebral palsy.

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BASIC SCIENCE: Mouse Model of Rett Syndrome
From Applied Genetics News, 3/1/01

Researchers led by Rudolf Jaenisch from the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research (9 Cambridge Center Cambridge, MA 02142- 1479; Tel: 617/258-5000) have created a transgenic mouse model for Rett syndrome, one of the most common causes of mental retardation in women. Their work is published in the March 2001 issue of Nature Genetics.

Rett syndrome, caused by a defective gene on the X-chromosome, is thought to have a lethal effect in males before or shortly after birth. Girls with Rett syndrome develop normally until 6 to 18 months old. But then they begin to show symptoms such as loss of speech, loss of voluntary motor control, constant hand wringing, and seizures.

It was known that mutations in a gene called MECP2 are responsible for Rett syndrome. However, the exact mechanism by which mutations bring about the mental deterioration was unclear. The Jaenisch lab used transgenic technology to create mice in which the Mecp2 gene could be disrupted at any time during their development before or after birth.

Surprisingly, male mice lacking Mecp2 did not die and showed a less severe syndrome. The male mice developed Rett-like symptoms, but survived to young adulthood, and females remained healthy well into adulthood. Similarities between the brains of mutant mice and Rett patients-small brains and small neurons-indicate that comparable brain and neuronal changes are occurring in both species, however.

Though the Mecp2 gene is expressed throughout the body, the researchers found that the Rett-like symptoms in mice were caused by brain malfunction rather than problems of Mecp2 deficiency in the rest of the body. The authors also demonstrated that the role of Mecp2 is not limited to the development of the brain before birth, but is also critical in the maintenance of mature neurons after birth. This suggests that therapeutic strategies could be aimed at preventing the development of postnatal defects in neurons.

COPYRIGHT 2001 Business Communications Company, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Gale Group

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