Targeted treatments for cognitive and neurodevelopmental disorders in tuberous sclerosis complex

被引:81
作者
de Vries P.J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Neurodevelopmental Service (NDS), Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust and Developmental Psychiatry Section, University of Cambridge, Cambridge
关键词
Autism; Autism spectrum disorders; Memory; MTOR; Neurocognition; Rapamycin; TSC;
D O I
10.1016/j.nurt.2010.05.001
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Until recently, the neuropsychiatric phenotype of tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) was presumed to be caused by the structural brain abnormalities and/or seizures seen in the disorder. However, advances in the molecular biology of the disorder have shown that TSC is a mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) overactivation syndrome, and that direct molecular pathways exist between gene mutation and cognitive/neurodevelopmental phenotype. Molecularly-targeted treatments using mTOR inhibitors (such as rapamycin) are showing great promise for the physical and neurological phenotype of TSC. Pre-clinical and early-phase clinical studies of the cognitive and neurodevelopmental features of TSC suggest that some of the neuropsychiatric phenotypes might also be reversible, even in adults with the disorder. TSC, fragile X, neurofibromatosis type 1, and disorders associated with phosphatase and tensin homo (PTEN) mutations, all signal through the mTOR signaling pathway, with the TSC1-TSC2 protein complex as a molecular switchboard at its center. Together, these disorders represent as much as 14% of autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Therefore, we suggest that this signaling pathway is a key to the underlying pathophysiology of a significant subset of individuals with ASD. The study of molecularly targeted treatments in TSC and related disorders, therefore, may be of scientific and clinical value not only to those with TSC, but to a larger population that may have a neuropsychiatric phenotype attributable to mTOR overactivation or dysregulation. © 2010 The American Society for Experimental NeuroTherapeutics, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:275 / 282
页数:7
相关论文
共 53 条
[1]  
Crino P.B., Nathanson K.L., Henske E.P., The tuberous sclerosis complex, N Engl J Med, 355, pp. 1345-1356, (2006)
[2]  
de Vries P.J., Howe C.J., The tuberous sclerosis complex proteins-a GRIPP on cognition and neurodevelopment, Trends Mol Med, 13, pp. 319-326, (2007)
[3]  
Jones A.C., Molecular genetic and phenotypic analysis reveals differences between TSC1 and TSC2 associated familial and sporadic tuberous sclerosis, Hum Mol Genet, 6, pp. 2155-2161, (1997)
[4]  
Dabora S.L., Mutational analysis in a cohort of 224 tuberous sclerosis patients indicates increased severity of TSC2, compared with TSC1, disease in multiple organs, Am J Hum Genet, 68, pp. 64-80, (2001)
[5]  
Roach E.S., Gomez M.R., Northrup H., Tuberous sclerosis consensus conference: revised diagnostic criteria, J Child Neurol, 13, pp. 624-628, (1998)
[6]  
Ridler K., Neuroanatomical correlates of memory deficits in tuberous sclerosis complex, Cereb Cortex, 17, pp. 261-271, (2007)
[7]  
Ridler K., Widespread anatomical abnormalities of grey and white matter structure in tuberous sclerosis, Psychol Med, 31, pp. 1437-1446, (2001)
[8]  
Franz D.N., de Vries P.J., Crino P.B., Giant cell astrocytomas in tuberous sclerosis complex, Arch Dis Child, 94, pp. 75-76, (2009)
[9]  
Franz D.N., Leonard J., Tudor C., Et al., Rapamycin causes regression of astrocytomas in tuberous sclerosis complex, Ann Neurol, 59, pp. 490-498, (2006)
[10]  
Wong M., Mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibition as a potential antiepileptogenic therapy: from tuberous sclerosis to common acquired epilepsies, Epilepsia, 51, pp. 27-36, (2010)