We present a 3⅓-year-old girl with severe Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1 (Dejerine-Sottas disease), who was a compound heterozygote carrying a deletion of the whole peripheral myelin protein 22 (PMP22) and a deletion of exon 5 in the other PMP22 allele.
Mutations in P0, the major protein of the myelin sheath in peripheral nerves, cause the inherited peripheral neuropathies Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1B (CMT1B), Dejerine-Sottas syndrome (DSS) and congenital hypomyelination (CH).
Molecular genetic analysis in Patient 2 disclosed a point mutation in the myelin protein zero gene; this same point mutation has been reported in three other patients diagnosed with Dejerine-Sottas syndrome (DSS) but has never been reported in a patient with CHN.
We describe a patient with a longstanding history of hypertrophic neuropathy of Dejerine-Sottas type, ultimately diagnosed with CMT1E disease due to a new p.Leu18Arg missense mutation in the first transmembrane domain of the PMP22 gene.
A patient is described with a Déjérine-Sottas syndrome caused by a novel heterozygous Cys(98)Tyr mutation in the extracellular domain of the major peripheral myelin protein zero (P0ex).
Dejerine-Sottas disease, also called hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type III (HMSNIII), is a severe, infantile onset demyelinating polyneuropathy syndrome that may be associated with point mutations in either the PMP22 gene of the P0 gene.
Point mutations in the coding region of the myelin genes, peripheral myelin protein 22 (PMP22), myelin protein zero (MPZ) or connexin 32 (Cx32) have been reported in CMT patients, including CMT type 1 (CMT1), CMT type 2 (CMT2) and Déjérine-Sottas neuropathy (DS) patients, and only in the coding region of PMP22 in HNPP families lacking a deletion.
Mutations in myelin protein zero (MPZ) cause inherited peripheral neuropathies, including Charcot‑Marie‑Tooth disease (CMT) and Dejerine‑Sottas neuropathy.
Dejerine-Sottas disease (DSD), also called hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type III (HMSNIII), is a severe, infantile-onset demyelinating polyneuropathy that may be associated with point mutations in either the PMP22 gene or the Po gene and shares considerable clinical and pathological features with CMT1.
Other mutations of the myelin protein PMP22 and myelin protein P0 genes have been associated with the clinical syndrome known as Dejerine-Sottas disease.
Studies have shown many of these genes, when mutated, can cause a wide range of CMT phenotypes from the relatively mild CMT1 to the more severe Dejerine-Sottas disease and congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy, and even in some cases axonal CMT2.
In 5 cases showing neither duplication, deletion, nor a point mutation in the exons of the PMP-22 gene on heteroduplex DNA analysis, the histopathological findings strongly suggested a diagnosis of chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy in 2 cases, and HMSN Ib, or HMSN non-a non-b, and HMSN III in 3 cases.
NB-UVB-exposed and non-exposed 30% NaCl and 30% DSS-treated NEM and PEM (except for NB-UVB-exposed and non-irradiated 30% DSS) showed significantly higher COX-2 mRNA when compared with controls and 3% NaCl.
This "de novo" mutation in a patient presenting with clinical features quite distinct from those of the more frequent Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1B disease (CMT1B) or Dejerine-Sottas syndrome (DSS) confirms that CH is allelic with other disorders characterized by a less severe phenotype and a different clinical and neuropathological profile.
Phe 84 deletion of the PMP22 gene associated with hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy HMSN III with multiple cranial neuropathy: clinical, neurophysiological and magnetic resonance imaging findings.
This 7-year-old boy with Dejerine-Sottas syndrome caused by a mutation in the myelin protein zero gene began to suffer rapid deterioration with increasing leg weakness, loss of the ability to ambulate, and bowel and bladder incontinence.
We investigated the presence of duplication in chromosome 17p11.2 in 4 individuals with sporadic Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT 1) and 1 isolated case where a definite differential diagnosis between CMT 1 and Déjérine-Sottas disease was not achieved.