A sequential morphological study of ovine ceroid-lipofuscinosis showed that brains of affected lambs were normal at birth, grew until four months of age but then atrophied. Laminar necrosis of cerebral cortex was noted at 10 weeks, occurring first in the parietal area, then spreading to involve frontal and occipital areas while the temporal lobe was least and last affected. With progression of the disease, the laminar pattern was lost. Neuronal necrosis was accompanied by a severe astrocytosis. The granular and multilamellar storage cytosomes increased in size with age. Their structure was interpreted as paracrystalline in which repeating molecules of the dominantly stored lipid binding subunit of mitochondrial ATP synthase interact with neutral lipids and phospholipids. Abnormal cytosomes in neurons of lamb fetuses and a neonate were interpreted as early lesions which contained whorls or stacks of bilayered membrane as well as the more complex multilamellar material. The underlying anomaly leading to the storage of the lipid binding subunit of mitochondrial ATPsynthase remains to be defined. However, it is noted that this disease should be regarded as a lipid binding protein proteinosis or alternatively as a proteolipid proteinosis.
A suction needle brain biopsy technique is a safe and effective method of obtaining cerebral cortex for experimental purposes in lambs. The biopsies are performed under general anaesthesia using halothane and oxygen following barbiturate induction. The method may have a number of related used in this of other species.
Ovine neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis represents another well studied model for human neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis (NCL). Accumulation of abnormal lipopigments in various retinal neurons, and loss of photoreceptors are similar to the lesions in human juvenile NCL and indicate that the sheep is a suitable model in which to study the pathogenesis of both NCL lipopigment formation and retinopathia pigmentosa. However, this latter process is not as advanced in NCL-diseased sheep as in human patients but far more obvious than in canine NCL in which retinopathy cannot be unequivocally documented. Ovine NCL shares with canine NCL peculiar lamellar inclusions in retinal pigment epithelial cells which may indicate an impaired catabolism of phagocytosed photoreceptor outer segments. As the peculiar lamellar inclusions seen in RPE cells of both NCL-diseased sheep and dogs do not very much resemble the phagocytosed photoreceptor outer segments, it may be assumed that in NCL the final steps in complete removal of these phagocytosed photoreceptor outer segments are also defective.
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