Impaired cerebral glucose metabolism in myotonic dystrophy: a triplet-size dependent phenomenon

被引:22
作者
Annane, D
Fiorelli, M
Mazoyer, B
Pappata, S
Eymard, B
Radvanyi, H
Junien, C
Fardeau, M
Merlet, P
Gajdos, P
Syrota, A
Sansom, Y
Duboc, D
机构
[1] Commissariat Energie Atom, Dept Rech Med, Serv Hosp Frederic Joliot, Direct Sci Vivant, F-91404 Orsay, France
[2] Hop Cochin, Serv Cardiol, F-75014 Paris, France
[3] Hop Raymond Poincare, Serv Reanimat Med, F-92380 Garches, France
[4] Univ Paris 06, INSERM, U153, UR, F-75013 Paris, France
[5] Hop Necker Enfants Malad, INSERM, U383, UR, F-75743 Paris, France
关键词
myotonic dystrophy; cerebral glucose metabolism; positron emission tomography; insulin resistance; CTG trinucleotide repeats;
D O I
10.1016/S0960-8966(97)00144-2
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Myotonic dystrophy (DM) is caused by an expansion of a CTG triplet repeat sequence in the 3'-noncoding region of a protein kinase gene, yet the mechanism by which the triplet repeat expansion causes disease remains unknown. Impaired glucose penetration into brain tissues has been described in DM patients and is a phenomenon that remains unexplained. The present study shows that altered brain glucose metabolism is triplet repeat dependent. We studied brain glucose metabolism (CMRGlu, mu mol/100 g/min) by the use of positron emission tomography and F-18-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose in 11 ambulatory non-obese DM patients and in 11 age and sex matched healthy subjects. All subjects underwent a glucose tolerance test with plasma insulin determinations. The expansion of CTG triplet repeats was analyzed in patients with the probe cDNA25 after EcoRI digestion, As compared to controls, in DM patients, the CMRGlu was significantly decreased (26.26 +/- 5.05 vs. 33.43 +/- 2.18, mu mol/100 g/min, P = 0.004), and after oral glucose loading, plasma insulin levels were significantly higher and plasma glucose levels remained unchanged (respectively, F = 11.21, P = 0.004 and F = 0.20, P = 0.66). Subsequently the glucose/insulin ratio was significantly lower in DM patients (F = 6.25, P = 0.02). The length of the expansion of the CTG repeats correlated negatively with the CMRGlu (r(2) = 0.63, P = 0.003) and positively with the area under the curve for insulin changes over time after oral glucose (r(2) = 0.49, P = 0.016). We conclude that, in DM patients, the brain metabolism of glucose is impaired in a repeat dependent manner. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V.
引用
收藏
页码:39 / 45
页数:7
相关论文
共 40 条
[11]   PHOSPHORYLATION REACTIONS OF RECOMBINANT HUMAN MYOTONIC-DYSTROPHY PROTEIN-KINASE AND THEIR INHIBITION [J].
DUNNE, PW ;
WALCH, ET ;
EPSTEIN, HF .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1994, 33 (35) :10809-10814
[12]  
FESTOFF BW, 1979, ANN NEUROL, V6, P60, DOI 10.1002/ana.410060114
[13]   DECREASED CEREBRAL GLUCOSE-UTILIZATION IN MYOTONIC-DYSTROPHY [J].
FIORELLI, M ;
DUBOC, D ;
MAZOYER, BM ;
BLIN, J ;
EYMARD, B ;
FARDEAU, M ;
SAMSON, Y .
NEUROLOGY, 1992, 42 (01) :91-94
[14]   AN UNSTABLE TRIPLET REPEAT IN A GENE RELATED TO MYOTONIC MUSCULAR-DYSTROPHY [J].
FU, YH ;
PIZZUTI, A ;
FENWICK, RG ;
KING, J ;
RAJNARAYAN, S ;
DUNNE, PW ;
DUBEL, J ;
NASSER, GA ;
ASHIZAWA, T ;
DEJONG, P ;
WIERINGA, B ;
KORNELUK, R ;
PERRYMAN, MB ;
EPSTEIN, HF ;
CASKEY, CT .
SCIENCE, 1992, 255 (5049) :1256-1258
[15]   CRITERIA FOR ESTABLISHING THE VALIDITY OF GENETIC-RECOMBINATION IN MYOTONIC-DYSTROPHY [J].
GRIGGS, RC ;
WOOD, DS .
NEUROLOGY, 1989, 39 (03) :420-421
[16]   EXPANSION OF AN UNSTABLE DNA REGION AND PHENOTYPIC VARIATION IN MYOTONIC-DYSTROPHY [J].
HARLEY, HG ;
BROOK, JD ;
RUNDLE, SA ;
CROW, S ;
REARDON, W ;
BUCKLER, AJ ;
HARPER, PS ;
HOUSMAN, DE ;
SHAW, DJ .
NATURE, 1992, 355 (6360) :545-546
[17]  
HARPER PS, 1979, MYOTONIC DYSTROPHY M, V9
[18]  
HERTZ MM, 1983, ADV METAB DISORD, V10, P291
[19]   EFFECT OF MYOTONIC-DYSTROPHY TRINUCLEOTIDE REPEAT EXPANSION ON DMPK TRANSCRIPTION AND PROCESSING [J].
KRAHE, R ;
ASHIZAWA, T ;
ABBRUZZESE, C ;
ROEDER, E ;
CARANGO, P ;
GIACANELLI, M ;
FUNANAGE, VL ;
SICILIANO, MJ .
GENOMICS, 1995, 28 (01) :1-14
[20]   TRANSPORT OF GLUCOSE FROM BLOOD TO BRAIN [J].
LUNDANDERSEN, H .
PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 1979, 59 (02) :305-352