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Case Reports
. 2016 Dec 1;9(1):93.
doi: 10.1186/s13041-016-0273-8.

Personalized medicine approach confirms a milder case of ABAT deficiency

Affiliations
Case Reports

Personalized medicine approach confirms a milder case of ABAT deficiency

A Besse et al. Mol Brain. .

Abstract

ABAT deficiency (OMIM 613163) is a rare inborn error of metabolism caused by recessive variants in the gene 4-aminobutyric acid transaminase (ABAT), which is responsible for both the catalysis of GABA and maintenance of nucleoside pools in the mitochondria. To date, only a few patients have been reported worldwide. Their clinical presentation has been remarkably consistent with primary features of severe psychomotor retardation, encephalopathy, hypotonia, and infantile-onset refractory epilepsy. We report a new case of ABAT deficiency that marks an important departure from previous clinical findings. The patient presented at age 6 months with global developmental delay, hypotonia, hypersomnolence and mild choreiform movements. At age 18 months, the subject's clinical presentation was still milder than all previously reported patients and, most notably, did not include seizures. Clinical whole exome sequencing revealed two heterozygous ABAT missense variants that are rare and predicted damaging, but never before reported in a patient and were reported as variants of unknown significance. To test the potential pathogenicity of the variants identified in this patient we developed a cell-based system to test both functions of the ABAT protein via GABA transaminase enzyme activity and mtDNA copy number assays. This systematic approach was validated using vigabatrin, the irreversible inhibitor of ABAT, and leveraged to test the functionality of all ABAT variants in previously reported patients plus the variants in this new case. This work confirmed the novel variants compromised ABAT function to similar levels as variants in previously characterized cases with more severe clinical presentation, thereby confirming the molecular diagnosis of this patient. Additionally, functional studies conducted in cells from both mild and severe patient fibroblasts showed similar levels of compromise in mitochondrial membrane potential, respiratory capacity, ATP production and mtDNA depletion. These results illustrate how cell-based functional studies can aid in the diagnosis of a rare, neurological disorder. Importantly, this patient marks an expansion in the clinical phenotype for ABAT deficiency to a milder presentation that is more commonly seen in pediatric genetics and neurology clinics.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Cranial MRI shows a consistent pattern of hypomyelination across ABAT patients. MRI of Subject 1 (S1) at age 9 months shows extensive T2 hyperintensity in the deep white matter that lags ~5 months behind the patient’s chronological age, suggesting diffuse mild hypomyelination. However, the anterior limb of the internal capsule is hyperintense on T1, and partially hypointense on T2, with a non-restricted ADC map. In contrast, while Subjects 2 (S2) and 3 (S3) are older at 13 and 17 months, myelination in the posterior limbs of the internal capsules is less complete and associated with restricted diffusion on ADC, suggestive of more severe hypomyelination. Additionally, Subjects 2 and 3 exhibit diffuse yet mild cerebral atrophy. Subject 3 also exhibits asymmetry with disproportionate right sided atrophy. C: caudate, P: putamen, GP: globus palidus, T: thalamus, PLIC: posterior limb of the internal capsule
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
GABA-T enzymatic activity and mtDNA copy number are diminished in cells expressing ABAT deficiency patient variants. a. Cells cultured in the presence of vigabatrin, the irreversible inhibitor of ABAT, show deficits in GABA-T activity and mtDNA copy number that follow a dose-response. b. Immunostaining for ABAT protein levels in cells transformed with non-targeting shRNA (shNT) and shRNA targeting ABAT (shABAT) show ABAT protein levels 19% of control in cells transformed with shABAT. c. GABA-T enzymatic activity and mtDNA copy number was measrured in cells transformed with shNT, shABAT, eGFP, open reading frame for wild-type ABAT (ABAT WT), and the mutations identified in ABAT deficiency patients. All experiments conducted in T98G cells
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Mitochondrial bioenergetics are compromised in ABAT deficiency patients. a. Mitochondrial membrane potential is reduced in fibroblasts from ABAT deficiency patients Subject 1 (S1), Subject2 (S2), and Subject3 (S3). b. Microscale oxygraphy demonstrated that ATP production, c. Basal respiration, d. Maximum respiration, and e. Reserve capacity were all relatively similarly compromised in ABAT deficiency patients, both mild (S1) and severe (S2, S3)
Fig. 4
Fig. 4
mtDNA copy number is decreased in ABAT deficiency patients. Healthy control (C) and patient fibroblasts (S1, S2, S3) were either grown in media with FBS 15% (NM) or in “low-serum” media FBS 1% for 10 days (LSM) mtDNA copy number was measured. NS = non-statistically significant, *** p-value < 0.0001

References

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