This is an old revision of the document!


Aicardi-Goutières syndrome

Aicardi-Goutieres syndrome (AGS) is a genetic encephalopathy characterized by the inappropriate induction of a type I interferon-mediated immune response and usually results in severe cognitive and neurologies morbidities. It is named after Aicardi and Goutières who first described it in 1984[1].

There are two distinct forms of the syndrome:

  1. Early onset
    1. severe
    2. affects about 20 percent of all babies who have AGS
    3. symptoms present at birth with hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, elevated liver enzymes
    4. irritability & poor feeding (mimic congenital viral infection)
  2. late-onset form
    1. less impact upon neurological function
    2. symptoms after the first weeks or months of normal development
    3. progressive decline in head growth
    4. muscle weakness & spasticity
    5. moderate to severe cognitive and developmental delays
    6. Symptoms last for several months, and include irritability, inconsolable crying, intermittent fever, seizures, and loss of developmental skills
    7. Skin manifestations include puffy swelling on the fingers, toes, and ears that resemble chilblains, acrocyanosis, periungual erythema, or necrotic lesions of the toes, fingers, and outer helix
    8. startle reaction to sudden noise
    9. no further worsening of the disease once the symptoms lessen
    10. 50% - 75% of patients with AGS develop focal and generalized seizures, which are sometimes refractory to treatment[2].

However the clinical features can be quite heterogenous. The neurological dysfunction is not always severe and need not even be present at all. Other features originally described including microcephaly, intracranial calcification, white matter changes and CSF lymphocytosis are not always present[3].

AGS is a genetically heterogeneous disease. Most cases of AGS are inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. However it can also be autosomal dominant with heterozygous mutations in TREX, ADAR, or IFIH1 genes. In some cases AGS-associated mutations show incomplete penetrance with children in the same family with the same mutations showing markedly different neurological and developmental outcomes[4]. To date AGS has been associated with mutations of seven different genes.

Type OMIM Gene Locus Frequency Inheritance Phenotypes Protein Function
AGS1 225750 TREX1 3p21.31 23% (1% dominant) AR (rare AD cases reported) AGS, FCL, RVCL, SLE 3′-5′ exonuclease with preference for ssDNA
AGS2 610181 RNASEH2B 13q14.3 36% AR AGS Non-catalytic component of RNase H2 complex
AGS3 610329 RNASEH2C 11q13.1 12% AR AGS Non-catalytic component of RNase H2 complex
AGS4 610333 RNASEH2A 19p13.2 5% AR AGS Catalytic component of RNase H2 complex
Acts on RNA portion of RNA/DNA hybrids and removes ribonuceotides embedded in DNA
AGS5 612952 SAMHD1 20q11.23 13% AR AGS, FCL dNTP triphosphohydrolase triphosphatase
AGS6 615010 ADAR 1q21.3 7% (1% dominant) AR, AD AGS, DSH Hydrolytic deamination of adenosine to inosine in dsRNA
AGS7 615846 IFIH1 2q24 3% (all dominant) AD AGS

The late onset form is observed most commonly in the context of mutations in RNASEH2B, SAMHD1 and ADAR1 while mutations in TREX1, RNASEH2A and RNASEH2C, mimic the sequelae of congenital, transplacentally acquired infection[3].

Proposed model of immune system stimulation by nucleic acids accumulating as a consequence of AGS related protein dysfunction[3]

Both AGS and many placentally acquired viral infections are characterized by the production of high levels of IFNα. Astrocyte-specific chronic overproduction of IFNα in transgenic mice has been shown to recapitulate the neuropathologic findings seen in AGS[5]. AGS shows a phenotypic overlap with some aspects of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) where an equivalent type I interferon-mediated innate immune response is triggered by self nucleic acids. Current experimental evidence suggests that the nucleases defective in AGS are involved in removing endogenously produced nucleic acid species, and that a failure of this removal results in activation of the immune system[6].

The actual pathomechanisms that lead to CNS damage in AGS patients are unknown. In a mouse model transgenic for a glial fibrillary acidic protein-interferon-alpha fusion protein where IFNα is expressed in an astrocyte-restricted fashion, transgenic animals develop a progressive inflammatory encephalopathy with neuropathologic features similar to AGS [66] suggesting a neurotoxic role of IFNα in the developing brain[5].

Interferonopathies comprise an expanding group of monogenic diseases characterised by disturbance of the homeostatic control of interferon (IFN)-mediated immune responses[7].

[Cerebral calcifications. A, Axial nonenhanced CT image showing numerous punctuate calcifications within the basal ganglia and the cerebral white matter B, Contrast-enhanced CT scan showing large calcifications in the white matter.Atrophy, microcephaly, and areas of hypoattenuation in the periventricular white matter are also shown.[(:cite:19628626>{{pubmed>short:19628626)]]

  • AGS is difficult to diagnose since many of the symptoms are similar to those of other disorders
  • Diagnosis is based on the clinical symptoms of the disease
  • Radiological abnormalities include basal ganglia calcification (usually bilateral) involving globus pallidus, putamen, caudate nucleus, and dentate nuclei. It may also extend to the periventricular white matter; increased signal on T2 weighted brain MRI particularly in the frontotemporal region along with cerebral atrophy[8].
  • Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) shows increased levels of lymphocytes indicating chronic lymphocytosis in the absence of evidence of infection.
  • Raised interferon-gamma in CSF
  • Treatment in the early stages of the disease might result in attenuation of the associated inflammation and consequent tissue damage
  • Treatment may be discontinued once the subacute encephalopathic period subsides
  • Treatment may have to be continued beyond the subacute encephalopathic phase in cases where chilblains are a particular problem
  • immune-modulating therapies have been tried empirically including prednisone with azathioprine, intravenous (i.v.) methylprednisolone with i.v. immunoglobulin (IVIG), methylprednisolone and IVIG alone with variable results.
  • Anti-interferon alpha antibody therapy: blocking interferon alpha activity using monoclonal antibodies is currently under consideration and clinical trials are currently underway in SLE[9].
  • Reverse transcriptase inhibitors (RTIs) (compounds that can potentially disrupt the replication cycle of both exogenous retroviruses and endogenous retro-elements) are of potential interest in treating AGS. RTIs are already prescribed in children and adults with HIV-1 infection[3].
  • Agents that deplete B cells are also potential therapeutic agents since AGS is associated with lymphocytes and autoantibody production
  • Other agents of interest include drugs that target autoreactive T cells such as Mycophenolate Mofetil

1. a short:6712192
2. a short:24011626
3. a, b, c, d short:23607857
4. a short:25604658
5. a, b short:9794439
6. a short:19808788
7. a short:29773266
8. a short:26581299
9. a short:20948567

AGS is distinct from the similarly named Aicardi syndrome (characterized by absence of a brain structure (corpus callosum), and spinal, skeletal, and eye abnormalities

Enter your comment. Wiki syntax is allowed:
U U W U N
 
  • content/aicardi-goutieres_syndrome.1580602642.txt.gz
  • Last modified: 2020/02/02 00:17
  • by icna