Disruption of the autism susceptibility candidate 2 (AUTS2) gene through genomic rearrangements, copy number variations (CNVs), and intragenic deletions and mutations, has been recurrently involved in syndromic forms of developmental delay and intellectual disability, known as AUTS2 syndrome. The AUTS2 gene plays an important role in regulation of neuronal migration, and when altered, associates with a variable phenotype from severely to mildly affected patients. The more severe phenotypes significantly correlate with the presence of defects affecting the C‐terminus part of the gene. This article reports a new patient with a syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder, who presents a deletion of 30 nucleotides in the exon 9 of the AUTS2 gene. Importantly, this deletion includes the transcription start site for the AUTS2 short transcript isoform, which has an important role in brain development. Gene expression analysis of AUTS2 full‐length and short isoforms revealed that the deletion found in this patient causes a remarkable reduction in the expression level, not only of the short isoform, but also of the full AUTS2 transcripts. This report adds more evidence for the role of mutated AUTS2 short transcripts in the development of a severe phenotype in the AUTS2 syndrome.
BackgroundMinocycline is an old tetracycline antibiotic that has shown antiinflammatory and antiapoptotic properties in different neurological disease mouse models. Previous single arm study in humans demonstrated benefits in individuals with Angelman Syndrome (AS); however, its efficacy in patients with Angelman Syndrome has not been assessed in a controlled trial.This was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial in individuals with AS, aged 6 years to 30 years (n = 32, mean age 12 [SD 6·29] years). Participants were randomized to minocycline or placebo for 8 weeks and then switched to the other treatment (a subset of 22 patients) or to receive minocycline for up to 16 weeks (10 patients). After week 16, all patients entered a wash-out 8-week follow-up period.ResultsThirty-six subjects were screened and 34 were randomized. Thirty two subjects (94·1%) completed at least the first period and all of them completed the full trial. Intention-to-treat analysis demonstrated the lack of significantly greater improvements in the primary outcome, mean changes in age equivalent of the development index of the Merrill-Palmer Revised Scale after minocycline compared with placebo (1·90 ± 3·16 and 2·00 ± 3·28, respectively, p = 0·937). Longer treatment duration up to 16 weeks did not result in better treatment outcomes (1·86 ± 3·35 for 8 weeks treatment vs 1·20 ± 5·53 for 16 weeks treatment, p = 0·667). Side effects were not significantly different during minocycline and placebo treatments. No serious adverse events occurred on minocycline.ConclusionsMinocycline treatment for up to 16 weeks in children and young adults with AS resulted in lack of significant improvements in development indexes compared to placebo treatment. Treatment with minocycline appears safe and well tolerated; even if it cannot be completely ruled out that longer trials might be required for a potential minocycline effect to be expressed, available results and lack of knowledge on the actual mechanism of action do not support this hypothesis.Trial registrationEuropean Clinical Trial database (EudraCT 2013-002154-67), registered 16th September 2013; US Clinical trials database (NCT02056665), registered 6th February 2014.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (10.1186/s13023-018-0891-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Introducción. El síndrome de Angelman (SA) está ampliamente descrito en la infancia, pero existen escasos estudios en edad adulta y la mayoría recoge un pequeño número de pacientes o condiciones específicas, como epilepsia o sueño. Objetivo. El objetivo de este estudio es describir el SA en la edad adulta en nuestro centro, sus necesidades especiales, y el soporte médico y social para mejorar la atención y ofrecer una mejor transición del servicio de pediatría a las unidades de adultos. Pacientes y métodos. Se recogen pacientes con SA genéticamente confirmado, y describimos datos demográficos, médicos y sociales mediante la revisión de historias clínicas, entrevistas telefónicas con el cuidador principal y tres escalas estandarizadas de sueño, dependencia y calidad de vida. Resultados. Se incluye a 30 pacientes con una mediana de edad de 22,7 años: 22 son deleciones, 27 presentan antecedente de epilepsia y 13 están en tratamiento con, al menos, dos fármacos antiepilépticos. Las comorbilidades más frecuentes después de la epilepsia fueron los síntomas psiquiátricos, la escoliosis, el sobrepeso, el estreñimiento y problemas oftalmológicos. El 40% precisó ingresos hospitalarios en la edad adulta, cinco están institucionalizados y 24 reciben terapias no médicas. El médico a cargo es el neurólogo en la mayoría, seguido del neuropediatra. Conclusiones. Es necesario realizar estudios de historia natural más allá de la infancia. Ésta es la primera revisión española de adultos con SA que recoge un amplio espectro de condiciones sociales y médicas de estos pacientes.
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