Entry - #250100 - METACHROMATIC LEUKODYSTROPHY; MLD - OMIM
# 250100

METACHROMATIC LEUKODYSTROPHY; MLD


Alternative titles; symbols

METACHROMATIC LEUKOENCEPHALOPATHY
CEREBRAL SCLEROSIS, DIFFUSE, METACHROMATIC FORM
SULFATIDE LIPIDOSIS
ARYLSULFATASE A DEFICIENCY
ARSA DEFICIENCY
CEREBROSIDE SULFATASE DEFICIENCY


Other entities represented in this entry:

PSEUDOARYLSULFATASE A DEFICIENCY, INCLUDED
METACHROMATIC LEUKODYSTROPHY, LATE INFANTILE, INCLUDED
METACHROMATIC LEUKODYSTROPHY, JUVENILE, INCLUDED
METACHROMATIC LEUKODYSTROPHY, ADULT, INCLUDED

Phenotype-Gene Relationships

Location Phenotype Phenotype
MIM number
Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
22q13.33 Metachromatic leukodystrophy 250100 AR 3 ARSA 607574
Clinical Synopsis
 

INHERITANCE
- Autosomal recessive
HEAD & NECK
Eyes
- Optic atrophy
ABDOMEN
Biliary Tract
- Gallbladder dysfunction
- Cholecystitis
GENITOURINARY
Bladder
- Urinary incontinence
NEUROLOGIC
Central Nervous System
- Mental deterioration
- Loss of speech
- Hypotonia
- Muscle weakness
- Gait disturbances
- Hyporeflexia (early)
- Dysarthria
- Dystonia
- Chorea
- Ataxia
- Spastic tetraplegia
- Hyperreflexia (later)
- Extensor plantar responses (later)
- Seizures
- Bulbar palsies
- Progression to tetraplegia and decerebrate state
- Cerebral white matter abnormalities
- Elevated CSF protein
Peripheral Nervous System
- Progressive polyneuropathy
- Demyelination
- EMG shows neuropathic changes
- Delayed nerve conduction velocity
Behavioral Psychiatric Manifestations
- Behavioral disturbances
- Emotional lability
- Poor school performance
- Hallucinations
- Delusions
- Disorganized thinking
LABORATORY ABNORMALITIES
- Metachromatic deposits (sulfatide-containing) in central and peripheral nervous systems and visceral organs
- Decreased arylsulfatase A (ARSA) activity in urine, leukocytes, fibroblasts
- Increased CSF protein
- Increased urinary sulfatide excretion
MISCELLANEOUS
- Late infantile onset 6-24 months
- Juvenile onset 4 years to puberty
- Adult onset after puberty
- Adult onset form usually presents with psychiatric manifestations
- Pseudoarylsulfatase A deficiency is an allelic disorder with reduced levels of ARSA activity, but no neurologic manifestations
MOLECULAR BASIS
- Caused by mutation in the arylsulfatase A gene (ARSA, 607574.0003)

TEXT

A number sign (#) is used with this entry because metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD) is caused by homozygous or compound heterozygous mutation in the arylsulfatase A gene (ARSA; 607574) on chromosome 22q13.


Description

The metachromatic leukodystrophies comprise several allelic disorders. Kihara (1982) recognized 5 allelic forms of MLD: late infantile, juvenile, and adult forms, partial cerebroside sulfate deficiency, and pseudoarylsulfatase A deficiency; and 2 nonallelic forms: metachromatic leukodystrophy due to saposin B deficiency (249900) and multiple sulfatase deficiency or juvenile sulfatidosis (272200), a disorder that combines features of a mucopolysaccharidosis with those of metachromatic leukodystrophy.


Clinical Features

Late Infantile and Juvenile Forms

This condition was described by Greenfield (1933). In the late infantile form, onset is usually in the second year of life and death occurs before 5 years in most. Clinical features are motor symptoms, rigidity, mental deterioration, and sometimes convulsions. Early development is normal but onset occurs before 30 months of age. The cerebrospinal fluid contains elevated protein. Galactosphingosulfatides that are strongly metachromatic, doubly refractile in polarized light, and pink with PAS are found in excess in the white matter of the central nervous system, in the kidney, and in the urinary sediment (Austin, 1960).

Masters et al. (1964) described 4 cases in 2 families. Progressive physical and mental deterioration began a few months after birth. Megacolon with attacks of abdominal distention was observed. Sufficient difference from the usual cases existed for the authors to suggest that more than one entity is encompassed by metachromatic leukodystrophy. A curious feature of later bedridden stages of the disease was marked genu recurvatum. The first manifestations, appearing before the second birthday, included hypotonia, muscle weakness and unsteady gait, thus suggesting a myopathy or neuropathy.

Gustavson and Hagberg (1971) described 13 cases of late infantile MLD from 11 families. Two pairs of families were related to each other and 3 sets of parents were consanguineous, suggesting autosomal recessive inheritance.

Lyon et al. (1961) described affected brothers with onset at 7 and 4 years of age and with marked elevation of protein in the cerebrospinal fluid. Schutta et al. (1966) recognized a juvenile form of metachromatic leukodystrophy with onset between ages 4 and 10 years, as compared with the more frequent late infantile form with onset between ages 12 and 24 months.

Moser (1972) suggested that juvenile cases of MLD, especially those of late juvenile onset, should be classed with the adult form. An alternative possibility was that some of these cases with phenotype intermediate between those of the late infantile and adult forms represented genetic compounds. The same very low levels of arylsulfatase A were found in the infantile, juvenile, and adult forms, and the reason for the differences in age of onset was unknown.

Von Figura et al. (1986) pointed out that the late-onset form of MLD is a heterogeneous group in which symptoms may develop at any age beyond 3 years. The age of demarcation of juvenile forms from adult forms is somewhat arbitrarily set at age 16 by some and age 21 by others. In the late-onset forms the disease progresses more slowly, and in mild cases the diagnosis may even go unsuspected during life.

Adult Form

In the adult form of metachromatic leukodystrophy, initial symptoms, which begin after age 16, are usually psychiatric and may lead to a diagnosis of schizophrenia. Disorders of movement and posture appear late. Differences from the late infantile form also include ability to demonstrate metachromatic material in paraffin- or celloidin-embedded sections and probably greater sulfatide excess in the gray than in the white matter in the adult form. The gallbladder is usually nonfunctional. Betts et al. (1968) described a man who was 28 when admitted to a psychiatric hospital for 'acute schizophrenia' and 35 when he died of bronchopneumonia. Muller et al. (1969) and Pilz and Muller (1969) described 2 unrelated women with this disorder. Affected sibs were recorded by Austin et al. (1968), among others.

Kihara et al. (1982) found partial cerebroside sulfatase deficiency (10-20% of normal activity in cultured fibroblasts) as the cause of neuropathy and myopathy since infancy in a 37-year-old white female. She had been institutionalized since age 16 for mental retardation. Waltz et al. (1987) described a 38-year-old man who had been diagnosed as schizophrenic and was treated for that condition for many years. The diagnosis of adult MLD was suspected because of white matter abnormalities detected by CT and MRI scanning of the brain; this diagnosis was confirmed by discovery of markedly reduced leukocyte arylsulfatase A activity. The man held a master's degree in physical education and worked full-time as a high school physical education teacher. Personality changes were first noted at about age 31.

Propping et al. (1986) studied consecutive admissions to a state psychiatric hospital and a group of inpatients with chronic psychiatric disorders. The data showed a slight preponderance in the lower levels of arylsulfatase A in leukocytes. Kohn et al. (1988) found no neurologic or EEG changes in MLD heterozygotes but found deficits in the neuropsychologic tests involving spatial or constructional components (but not in tests involving language skills). Tay-Sachs heterozygotes (272800) showed no consistent deficit in any component of the neurologic or neuropsychologic tests.

Marcao et al. (2005) reported a woman with adult-onset MLD confirmed by genetic analysis. She presented at age 37 years with dysfunctional and bizarre behavior, including progressive apathy, loss of interest in daily living routines and caring for her 3 children, and memory disturbances. She had no clinical signs of neuropathy, although MRI showed subcortical brain atrophy and periventricular white matter changes. Nerve conduction velocities were normal; sural nerve biopsy findings were consistent with a slowly progressive demyelinating neuropathy. Despite the relatively mild clinical phenotype, ARSA activity was less than 1% of control values.

Biochemical Features

Austin et al. (1964) determined that the defect in MLD involves the lysosomal enzyme arylsulfatase A. Since the metachromatic material is cerebroside sulfate, MLD is a sulfatide lipidosis. Stumpf and Austin (1971) presented evidence suggesting that the abnormality in arylsulfatase A is quantitatively and qualitatively different in the late infantile and juvenile forms of metachromatic leukodystrophy. Percy and Kaback (1971) found no difference in enzyme levels between the infantile and adult-onset types, and concluded that some other factor must account for the difference in age of onset.

Porter et al. (1971) corrected the metabolic defect in cultured fibroblasts by addition of arylsulfatase A to the medium. They found that cultured fibroblasts from late-onset metachromatic leukodystrophy hydrolyzed appreciable amounts of exogenous cerebroside sulfate, whereas fibroblasts from patients with the early-onset form hydrolyzed none. Studies of cell-free preparations showed no cerebroside sulfatase activity. Percy et al. (1977) found that cultured skin fibroblasts from the adult-onset patients, although clearly abnormal, were able to catabolize sulfatide significantly more effectively than cultured skin fibroblasts from late infantile patients.

By the technique of isoelectric focusing on cellulose acetate membranes, Farrell et al. (1979) found differences in arylsulfatase A isozymes that correlated with the clinical type of metachromatic leukodystrophy, i.e., juvenile or late infantile. Chang et al. (1982) showed that fusion of cells from the infantile and juvenile forms of MLD did not result in complementation of arylsulfatase A activity, and concluded that they are allelic disorders.

In the cells from patients with juvenile and adult forms of MLD, von Figura et al. (1983) found severe deficiency in the arylsulfatase polypeptide but a rate of synthesis that was 20 to 50% of control. In the absence of NH4Cl, the mutant enzyme was rapidly degraded upon transport into lysosomes. In the presence of inhibitors of thiol proteases, e.g., leupeptin, arylsulfatase A polypeptides were partially protected from degradation with increase in catalytic activity of arylsulfatase A and improved ability of the cells to degrade cerebroside sulfates. Therapeutic use of this approach was suggested. The approach might be useful in other lysosomal storage diseases in which an unstable mutant enzyme is produced, e.g., the late form of glycogen storage disease II (232300). In a study of 8 patients with the juvenile form of MLD, von Figura et al. (1986) found that the mutation leads to the synthesis of arylsulfatase A polypeptides with increased susceptibility to cysteine proteinases. Multiple allelic mutations within this group were suggested by clinical heterogeneity, variability in residual activity, and response to inhibitors (cysteine proteinases).

Pseudoarylsulfatase A deficiency

Pseudoarylsulfatase A deficiency refers to a condition of apparent ARSA enzyme deficiency in persons without neurologic abnormalities. Dubois et al. (1977) described very low arylsulfatase A and cerebroside sulfatase activities in leukocytes of healthy members of a metachromatic leukodystrophy family. Langenbeck et al. (1977) proposed a one locus, multiple allele hypothesis to explain the peculiar findings in that kindred.

Butterworth et al. (1978) reported a child with very low levels of the enzyme whose mother was, seemingly, heterozygous and whose father carried a variant gene giving a very low in vitro level. They concluded that low arylsulfatase A is not necessarily indicative of this disease, which should be taken into consideration when screening for the disease.

A pseudodeficiency allele at the arylsulfatase A locus was delineated by Schaap et al. (1981). Clinically healthy persons with ARSA levels in the range of MLD patients have been found among the relatives of MLD patients. Cultured fibroblasts from persons with pseudodeficiency catabolize cerebroside sulfate; fibroblasts from MLD patients do not. Zlotogora and Bach (1983) pointed out that lysosomal hydrolases deficient in cases of metachromatic leukodystrophy, Tay-Sachs disease, Fabry disease, and Krabbe disease have also been found to be deficient in healthy persons. The authors suggested that most of the latter cases represent the compound heterozygote for the deficient allele and another allele coding for an in vitro low enzyme activity (pseudodeficiency).

Chang and Davidson (1983) could demonstrate no restoration of activity of arylsulfatase A in hybrid cells created from cells of individuals with MLD and individuals with pseudo-ARSA deficiency. They concluded, therefore, that the 2 mutations are allelic. They showed that the 2 conditions can be distinguished in the laboratory by a simple electrophoretic analysis of residual ARSA activity.

Kihara et al. (1986) noted that the apparent enzyme deficiency in persons without neurologic abnormalities is due in part to the nonspecificity of the synthetic substrates used for assays and in part to a high redundancy of arylsulfatase A.


Diagnosis

Austin et al. (1964) determined that the defect concerns the lysosomal enzyme arylsulfatase A. Austin's test to demonstrate absence of arylsulfatase A activity in the urine was useful in early diagnosis (Greene et al., 1967). Kaback and Howell (1970) demonstrated profound deficiency of arylsulfatase A in cultured skin fibroblasts of patients and an intermediate deficiency in carriers. Normally enzyme levels are low in midtrimester amniotic cells; hence, homozygotes cannot be reliably identified by amniocentesis.

Prenatal Diagnosis

Poenaru et al. (1988) described a method of first-trimester prenatal diagnosis of metachromatic leukodystrophy using immunoprecipitation-electrophoresis on chorionic villus material.

Baldinger et al. (1987) discussed the complications of genetic counseling and prenatal diagnosis resulting from the occurrence of the pseudodeficiency phenotype.


Clinical Management

Bayever et al. (1985) observed apparent improvement (i.e., continued developmental progress) in a boy with late infantile MLD given a bone marrow transplant from an HLA-identical sister. Krivit et al. (1990) reported improvement in neurophysiologic function and sulfatide metabolism in an affected 10-year-old girl who had received a bone marrow transplant 5 years previously.

Pierson et al. (2008) reported 3 sibs with juvenile MLD who received unrelated umbilical cord blood transplantation at different stages of disease: they were 8, 6, and 4 years old, respectively, at the time of treatment. The 8-year-old boy had an IQ of 59, spasticity, and white matter lesions on MRI before transplant and experienced disease progression after transplant. His 6-year-old brother had an IQ of 88 and moderate white matter lesions before transplant, but remained neurologically stable and showed some improvement in nerve conduction velocity and near resolution of white matter lesions after transplant. His 4-year-old sister had no neurologic impairment or white matter lesions before transplant, and remained normal after transplant. She developed mild white matter lesions about 6 months after transplant, but these resolved within the following 6 months. Pierson et al. (2008) concluded that pretransplantion neurologic status is the best predictor of outcome following cord blood transplant and that cord blood transplant can stop disease progression in MLD.

Wang et al. (2011) described the ACMG standards and guidelines for the diagnostic confirmation and management of presymptomatic individuals with lysosomal storage diseases.

Biffi et al. (2013) performed lentiviral hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gene therapy on 3 asymptomatic children with ARSA deficiency known because of older sibs with early-onset MLD carrying the same mutations. Following myeloablative busulfan conditioning, patients were transduced with hematopoietic stem cells with the lentiviral gene. There was high-level stable engraftment of the transduced HSCs in bone marrow and peripheral blood of all patients at all times tested, with 45 to 80% of bone marrow-derived hematopoietic colonies harboring the vector. ARSA activity was reconstituted to above-normal values in the hematopoietic lineages and in the cerebrospinal fluid. None of the 3 patients had progression of disease at up to 24 months after treatment, even after the time of onset projected from sib cases.

Dali et al. (2020) tested the safety of intrathecal administration of recombinant human arylsulfatase A (rhASA) in 24 children with MLD in an open-label, 38-week study. Patients were assigned to cohorts and treated with either 10, 30, or 100 mg of rhASA every other week. There were no deaths and no drug-related serious adverse events, although 25% of patients had a serious adverse event associated with the intrathecal device or drug delivery method. Ten patients developed treatment-induced anti-rhASA antibodies in serum, but there was no correlation between serum antibody response and adverse events. Dali et al. (2020) found dose- and time-dependent reductions in CSF sulfatide and lysosulfatide levels at all doses, with levels reduced to the normal range in patients receiving the 100 mg dose. Dali et al. (2020) concluded that rhASA was generally well-tolerated at doses up to 100 mg administered every other week.

Kaminski et al. (2020) examined the in vitro uptake of arylsulfatase A by different brain-derived cell lines and primary murine brain cells. Endocytosis of human ASA expressed by Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells was highest in primary murine neurons and astrocytes and lowest in oligodendrocytes. Immature oligodendrocytes were able to endocytose this form of ASA. Mannose 6-phosphate (M6P) was able to inhibit ASA uptake by nonglial cells, indicating that the mechanism of uptake of ASA was through M6P receptor-mediated endocytosis. Primary murine microglial cells were found to employ a combination of M6P-receptors, mannose receptors, and scavenger receptors to endocytose ASA. As opposed to the ASA expressed by CHO cells, ASA expressed by microglial cells was not taken up in an M6P-dependent fashion by mouse embryonic fibroblasts, indicating failure of metabolic cross-correction by receptor-mediated endocytosis.


Molecular Genetics

In patients with MLD, Polten et al. (1991), Gieselmann et al. (1991), Kondo et al. (1991), Bohne et al. (1991), and Fluharty et al. (1991) identified mutations in the ARSA gene (e.g., 607574.0003).

Gieselmann et al. (1994) stated that 31 amino acid substitutions, 1 nonsense mutation, 3 small deletions, 3 splice donor site mutations, and 1 combined missense/splice donor site mutation had been identified in the ARSA gene in metachromatic leukodystrophy. Two of these mutant alleles account for about 25% of MLD alleles each.

Pseudodeficiency Alleles

Gieselmann et al. (1989) determined 2 pseudodeficiency alleles of the ARSA gene (607574.0001-607574.0002).


Genotype/Phenotype Correlations

Hohenschutz et al. (1988) described a probable case of the genetic compound between metachromatic leukodystrophy and pseudodeficiency. The patient developed slight spasticity of the left leg at the age of 36 years and left-sided retrobulbar neuritis at the age of 62, together with slight spasticity of both legs. The diagnosis of encephalomyelitis disseminata was made. There were psychiatric manifestations as well. Based on the facts that the pseudodeficiency allele at the ARSA locus is common (gene frequency = 13.7 to 17%), that genetic compounds between the pseudodeficiency allele and the true deficiency allele may be as frequent as 0.073%, and that the residual enzyme activity may fall below a critical threshold in such individuals, Hohenschutz et al. (1989) suggested that the compound heterozygote genotype might be associated with neuropsychiatric disorders of late onset.

In 34 individuals with low ASA activity, Kappler et al. (1991) identified 3 different classes: homozygosity for the pseudodeficiency allele (ASAp/ASAp) (10 individuals), compound heterozygosity for ASAp and ASA- (6 individuals), and homozygosity of ASA- (16 individuals). The genotypes exhibited different levels of residual ASA activity. ASAp/ASAp was associated with normal sulfatide degrading capacity and a reduced ASA activity that was the highest of the 3 classes (10-50% of normal). ASAp/ASAp subjects showed no evidence of MLD. ASAp/ASA- subjects showed mildly reduced sulfatide degrading capacity and a reduced ASA activity that was in between the other 2 classes (10% of controls). ASAp/ASA- subjects were either healthy or showed mild neurologic abnormalities. ASA-/ASA- subjects showed markedly reduced sulfatide degradation and markedly reduced ASA activity. Only the ASA-/ASA- genotype was associated with the development of both early- and late-onset MLD, including neuropsychiatric symptoms.

Berger et al. (1999) described a family with 3 sibs, 1 of whom developed classic late infantile MLD, fatal at age 5 years, with deficient ARSA activity and increased galactosylsulfatide (GS) excretion. The other 2 sibs, apparently healthy at 12.5 and 15 years, and their father, apparently healthy as well, presented ARSA and GS values within the range of MLD patients. Mutation analysis demonstrated that 3 different ARSA mutations accounted for the intrafamilial phenotypic heterogeneity. One of the mutations, although clearly modifying ARSA and GS levels, apparently had little significance for clinical manifestation of MLD, The results demonstrated that in certain genetic conditions the ARSA and GS values may not be paralleled by clinical disease, a finding with serious diagnostic and prognostic implications. Moreover, further ARSA alleles functionally may exist which, together with 0-type mutations may cause ARSA and GS levels in the pathologic range but no clinical manifestation of the disease.

Regis et al. (2002) identified a late infantile MLD patient carrying on one allele a novel E253K mutation (607574.0044) and the known T391S polymorphism, and on the other allele the common P426L mutation (607574.0004), usually associated with the adult or juvenile form of the disease, and the N350S (607574.0002) and *96A-G pseudodeficiency mutations. To analyze the contribution of mutations based on the same allele to enzyme activity reduction, as well as the possible phenotype implications, they performed transient expression experiments using ARSA cDNAs carrying the identified mutations separately or in combination. Their results indicated that mutants carrying multiple mutations cause greater reduction of ARSA activity than do the corresponding single mutants, the total deficiency likely corresponding to the sum of the reductions attributed to each mutation. Consequently, each mutation may contribute to the ARSA activity reduction, and, therefore, to the degree of disease severity. This is particularly important for the alleles containing a disease-causing mutation and the pseudodeficiency mutations: in these alleles pseudodeficiency could play a role in affecting the clinical phenotype.

Rauschka et al. (2006) evaluated 42 patients with late-onset MLD, 22 of whom were homozygous for the P426L mutation and 20 of whom were compound heterozygous for I179S (607574.0008) and another pathogenic ARSA mutation. Patients homozygous for the P426L mutation presented with progressive gait disturbance caused by spastic paraparesis or cerebellar ataxia; mental disturbance was absent or insignificant at disease onset but became more apparent as the disease evolved. Peripheral nerve conduction velocities were decreased. In contrast, patients who were heterozygous for I179S presented with schizophrenia-like behavior changes, social dysfunction, and mental decline, but motor deficits were scarce. There was less residual ARSA activity in those with P426L mutations compared to those with I179S mutations.

Biffi et al. (2008) reported 26 patients with MLD who were classified clinically according to age at onset into late-infantile (17), early juvenile (6), late-juvenile (2), and adult (1). These patients were found to carry 18 mutations in the ARSA gene, including 10 rare and 8 novel mutations, that were classified as null '0' alleles lacking residual activity and 'R' alleles with residual activity. The null/null homozygous patients were the most severely affected with severe clinical manifestations, profound motor and cognitive deficits, and rapid disease progression. Patients who were null/R compound heterozygous showed a similar presentation and disease evolution, although less rapid, to null/null homozygotes. Despite some variability, all R/R homozygous patients showed a milder disease burden and slower progression when compared with null/null and null/R subjects. Biffi et al. (2008) observed early involvement of the peripheral nervous system in all patients with at least 1 null allele, and the authors suggested that evaluation of nerve conduction velocities could be used as a frontline test for all MLD patients,


Population Genetics

Although MLD occurs panethnically, with an estimated frequency of 1/40,000, Heinisch et al. (1995) found it to be more frequent among Arabs living in 2 restricted areas in Israel. Ten families with affected children were found, 3 in the Jerusalem region and 7 in a small area in lower Galilee. Whereas all patients from the Jerusalem region were homozygous for the splice donor site mutation at the border of exon/intron 2 (607574.0003), 5 different mutations were found in the 7 families from lower Galilee, all of them in homozygous state. Two of the families were Muslim Arabs and 2 were Christian Arabs. Four different haplotypes were represented by the 5 mutations. Zlotogora et al. (1994) studied the ARSA haplotypes defined by 3 intragenic polymorphic sites in 3 Muslim Arab families and 1 Christian Arab family from Jerusalem with the splice donor site mutation at the border of exon/intron 2. The parents were first cousins in all 4 families, but no relationship between these families was known. All 4 patients had the same haplotype, i.e., BglI(1), BamHI(1), BsrI(1), which is rare (3.9%) in the general population. Zlotogora et al. (1994) found the same haplotype in 8 non-Arab patients from the US and Europe who were homozygous for this allele. The strong association between this mutation and haplotype suggested a common origin for the mutation, which may have been introduced into Jerusalem at the time of the Crusades.

Holve et al. (2001) found that cases of MLD among Navajo Indians were clustered in a portion of the western Navajo Nation to which a small number of Navajo fled after armed conflict with the United States Army in the 1860s. The observed incidence of MLD in that region was 1/2,520 live births, with an estimated carrier frequency of 1/25 to 1/50. No cases were observed in the eastern part of the Navajo Nation over a period of 18 years (60,000 births). Bottleneck and founder effect from the mid-19th century could explain the high incidence of MLD as well as a number of other heritable disorders among the Navajo.

In Israel, Herz and Bach (1984) estimated the frequency of the pseudodeficiency allele to be about 15%. In a Spanish population, Chabas et al. (1993) estimated the frequency of the pseudodeficiency allele to be 12.7%.

In a retrospective hospital- and clinic-based study involving 122 children with an inherited leukodystrophy, Bonkowsky et al. (2010) found that the most common diagnoses were metachromatic leukodystrophy (8.2%), Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (312080) (7.4%), mitochondrial diseases (4.9%), and adrenoleukodystrophy (300100) (4.1%). No final diagnosis was reported in 51% of patients. The disorder was severe: epilepsy was found in 49%, mortality was 34%, and the average age at death was 8.2 years. The population incidence of leukodystrophy in general was found to be 1 in 7,663 live births.


History

Yatziv and Russell (1981) reported 3 adult sibs of Sephardic Jewish extraction who had a form of primary dystonia with onset in childhood. There was a marked deficiency of arylsulfatase A in urine, leukocytes, and fibroblasts. The clinically normal parents both showed a 50% reduction in ARSA activity. Yatziv and Russell (1981) reported the disorder in this family as an 'unusual form of metachromatic leukodystrophy,' but Khan et al. (2003) later reported that genetic analysis of the family indicated pseudoarylsulfatase A deficiency: the mother and all 3 sibs were homozygous, and the father was heterozygous, for the polyA pseudodeficiency allele (607574.0001). Khan et al. (2003) diagnosed the family with autosomal recessive primary dystonia (DYT2; 224500); Charlesworth et al. (2015) identified a homozygous missense mutation in the HPCA gene (N75K; 142622.0001) in the affected individuals, thus confirming the diagnosis.


Animal Model

Since no naturally occurring animal model of metachromatic leukodystrophy is available, Hess et al. (1996) generated Arsa-deficient mice by targeted disruption of the gene in embryonic stem cells. Deficient animals stored the sphingolipid cerebroside-3-sulfate in various neuronal and nonneuronal tissues. Storage pattern was comparable with that in affected humans, but gross defect of white matter with progressive demyelination was not observed up to the age of 2 years. Reduction of axonal cross-sectional area and astrogliosis were observed in 1-year-old mice; activation of microglia started at 1 year and was generalized at 2 years. Purkinje cell dendrites showed altered morphology. In the acoustic ganglion numbers of neurons and myelinated fibers were severely decreased, which was accompanied by loss of brainstem auditory-evoked potentials. Neurologic examination demonstrated significant impairment of neuromotor coordination.

Matzner et al. (2005) treated Arsa-knockout mice by intravenous injection of recombinant human ARSA. Uptake of injected enzyme was high into liver, moderate into peripheral nervous system (PNS) and kidney, and very low into brain. A single injection led to a time- and dose-dependent decline of the excess sulfatide in PNS and kidney by up to 70%, but no reduction was seen in brain. Four weekly injections of 20 mg/kg body weight not only reduced storage in peripheral tissues progressively, but also reduced sulfatide storage in brain and spinal cord. Histopathology of kidney and central nervous system was ameliorated. Improved neuromotor coordination capabilities and normalized peripheral compound motor action potential suggested benefit of enzyme replacement therapy on nervous system function.


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Hilary J. Vernon - updated : 09/30/2021
Hilary J. Vernon - updated : 09/30/2020
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 4/28/2015
Ada Hamosh - updated : 1/6/2014
Ada Hamosh - updated : 10/3/2012
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 10/20/2010
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 6/26/2009
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 2/13/2009
George E. Tiller - updated : 5/19/2008
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 7/31/2007
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 6/27/2005
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 2/3/2004
Cassandra L. Kniffin - reorganized : 2/28/2003
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 1/28/2003
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 8/27/2002
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 5/13/2002
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 7/31/2001
Majed J. Dasouki - updated : 4/13/2001
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 1/12/1999
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 9/29/1998
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 9/18/1998
Clair A. Francomano - updated : 5/27/1998
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 12/2/1997
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 5/8/1997
Iosif W. Lurie - updated : 9/15/1996
Stylianos E. Antonarakis - updated : 7/6/1996
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carol : 1/21/2008
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ckniffin : 7/31/2007
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terry : 8/27/2002
terry : 8/27/2002
alopez : 5/16/2002
terry : 5/13/2002
cwells : 8/10/2001
cwells : 8/1/2001
terry : 7/31/2001
carol : 4/13/2001
carol : 9/22/1999
carol : 4/2/1999
carol : 1/14/1999
terry : 1/12/1999
carol : 9/30/1998
terry : 9/29/1998
carol : 9/22/1998
terry : 9/18/1998
dkim : 9/10/1998
carol : 7/16/1998
carol : 6/19/1998
terry : 6/16/1998
terry : 6/16/1998
terry : 6/3/1998
dholmes : 5/28/1998
dholmes : 5/27/1998
dholmes : 5/21/1998
mark : 12/9/1997
terry : 12/2/1997
terry : 12/2/1997
alopez : 7/10/1997
terry : 7/9/1997
jenny : 6/23/1997
mark : 6/23/1997
jenny : 6/17/1997
mark : 6/17/1997
mark : 5/8/1997
alopez : 5/6/1997
jamie : 1/7/1997
jamie : 1/7/1997
terry : 1/3/1997
carol : 9/15/1996
mark : 11/6/1995
pfoster : 9/30/1994
davew : 6/3/1994
terry : 4/18/1994
mimadm : 4/17/1994
warfield : 3/9/1994

# 250100

METACHROMATIC LEUKODYSTROPHY; MLD


Alternative titles; symbols

METACHROMATIC LEUKOENCEPHALOPATHY
CEREBRAL SCLEROSIS, DIFFUSE, METACHROMATIC FORM
SULFATIDE LIPIDOSIS
ARYLSULFATASE A DEFICIENCY
ARSA DEFICIENCY
CEREBROSIDE SULFATASE DEFICIENCY


Other entities represented in this entry:

PSEUDOARYLSULFATASE A DEFICIENCY, INCLUDED
METACHROMATIC LEUKODYSTROPHY, LATE INFANTILE, INCLUDED
METACHROMATIC LEUKODYSTROPHY, JUVENILE, INCLUDED
METACHROMATIC LEUKODYSTROPHY, ADULT, INCLUDED

SNOMEDCT: 238031009, 396338004, 44359008, 66521008;   ICD10CM: E75.25, E75.29;   ORPHA: 309256, 309263, 309271, 512;   DO: 10581;  


Phenotype-Gene Relationships

Location Phenotype Phenotype
MIM number
Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
22q13.33 Metachromatic leukodystrophy 250100 Autosomal recessive 3 ARSA 607574

TEXT

A number sign (#) is used with this entry because metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD) is caused by homozygous or compound heterozygous mutation in the arylsulfatase A gene (ARSA; 607574) on chromosome 22q13.


Description

The metachromatic leukodystrophies comprise several allelic disorders. Kihara (1982) recognized 5 allelic forms of MLD: late infantile, juvenile, and adult forms, partial cerebroside sulfate deficiency, and pseudoarylsulfatase A deficiency; and 2 nonallelic forms: metachromatic leukodystrophy due to saposin B deficiency (249900) and multiple sulfatase deficiency or juvenile sulfatidosis (272200), a disorder that combines features of a mucopolysaccharidosis with those of metachromatic leukodystrophy.


Clinical Features

Late Infantile and Juvenile Forms

This condition was described by Greenfield (1933). In the late infantile form, onset is usually in the second year of life and death occurs before 5 years in most. Clinical features are motor symptoms, rigidity, mental deterioration, and sometimes convulsions. Early development is normal but onset occurs before 30 months of age. The cerebrospinal fluid contains elevated protein. Galactosphingosulfatides that are strongly metachromatic, doubly refractile in polarized light, and pink with PAS are found in excess in the white matter of the central nervous system, in the kidney, and in the urinary sediment (Austin, 1960).

Masters et al. (1964) described 4 cases in 2 families. Progressive physical and mental deterioration began a few months after birth. Megacolon with attacks of abdominal distention was observed. Sufficient difference from the usual cases existed for the authors to suggest that more than one entity is encompassed by metachromatic leukodystrophy. A curious feature of later bedridden stages of the disease was marked genu recurvatum. The first manifestations, appearing before the second birthday, included hypotonia, muscle weakness and unsteady gait, thus suggesting a myopathy or neuropathy.

Gustavson and Hagberg (1971) described 13 cases of late infantile MLD from 11 families. Two pairs of families were related to each other and 3 sets of parents were consanguineous, suggesting autosomal recessive inheritance.

Lyon et al. (1961) described affected brothers with onset at 7 and 4 years of age and with marked elevation of protein in the cerebrospinal fluid. Schutta et al. (1966) recognized a juvenile form of metachromatic leukodystrophy with onset between ages 4 and 10 years, as compared with the more frequent late infantile form with onset between ages 12 and 24 months.

Moser (1972) suggested that juvenile cases of MLD, especially those of late juvenile onset, should be classed with the adult form. An alternative possibility was that some of these cases with phenotype intermediate between those of the late infantile and adult forms represented genetic compounds. The same very low levels of arylsulfatase A were found in the infantile, juvenile, and adult forms, and the reason for the differences in age of onset was unknown.

Von Figura et al. (1986) pointed out that the late-onset form of MLD is a heterogeneous group in which symptoms may develop at any age beyond 3 years. The age of demarcation of juvenile forms from adult forms is somewhat arbitrarily set at age 16 by some and age 21 by others. In the late-onset forms the disease progresses more slowly, and in mild cases the diagnosis may even go unsuspected during life.

Adult Form

In the adult form of metachromatic leukodystrophy, initial symptoms, which begin after age 16, are usually psychiatric and may lead to a diagnosis of schizophrenia. Disorders of movement and posture appear late. Differences from the late infantile form also include ability to demonstrate metachromatic material in paraffin- or celloidin-embedded sections and probably greater sulfatide excess in the gray than in the white matter in the adult form. The gallbladder is usually nonfunctional. Betts et al. (1968) described a man who was 28 when admitted to a psychiatric hospital for 'acute schizophrenia' and 35 when he died of bronchopneumonia. Muller et al. (1969) and Pilz and Muller (1969) described 2 unrelated women with this disorder. Affected sibs were recorded by Austin et al. (1968), among others.

Kihara et al. (1982) found partial cerebroside sulfatase deficiency (10-20% of normal activity in cultured fibroblasts) as the cause of neuropathy and myopathy since infancy in a 37-year-old white female. She had been institutionalized since age 16 for mental retardation. Waltz et al. (1987) described a 38-year-old man who had been diagnosed as schizophrenic and was treated for that condition for many years. The diagnosis of adult MLD was suspected because of white matter abnormalities detected by CT and MRI scanning of the brain; this diagnosis was confirmed by discovery of markedly reduced leukocyte arylsulfatase A activity. The man held a master's degree in physical education and worked full-time as a high school physical education teacher. Personality changes were first noted at about age 31.

Propping et al. (1986) studied consecutive admissions to a state psychiatric hospital and a group of inpatients with chronic psychiatric disorders. The data showed a slight preponderance in the lower levels of arylsulfatase A in leukocytes. Kohn et al. (1988) found no neurologic or EEG changes in MLD heterozygotes but found deficits in the neuropsychologic tests involving spatial or constructional components (but not in tests involving language skills). Tay-Sachs heterozygotes (272800) showed no consistent deficit in any component of the neurologic or neuropsychologic tests.

Marcao et al. (2005) reported a woman with adult-onset MLD confirmed by genetic analysis. She presented at age 37 years with dysfunctional and bizarre behavior, including progressive apathy, loss of interest in daily living routines and caring for her 3 children, and memory disturbances. She had no clinical signs of neuropathy, although MRI showed subcortical brain atrophy and periventricular white matter changes. Nerve conduction velocities were normal; sural nerve biopsy findings were consistent with a slowly progressive demyelinating neuropathy. Despite the relatively mild clinical phenotype, ARSA activity was less than 1% of control values.

Biochemical Features

Austin et al. (1964) determined that the defect in MLD involves the lysosomal enzyme arylsulfatase A. Since the metachromatic material is cerebroside sulfate, MLD is a sulfatide lipidosis. Stumpf and Austin (1971) presented evidence suggesting that the abnormality in arylsulfatase A is quantitatively and qualitatively different in the late infantile and juvenile forms of metachromatic leukodystrophy. Percy and Kaback (1971) found no difference in enzyme levels between the infantile and adult-onset types, and concluded that some other factor must account for the difference in age of onset.

Porter et al. (1971) corrected the metabolic defect in cultured fibroblasts by addition of arylsulfatase A to the medium. They found that cultured fibroblasts from late-onset metachromatic leukodystrophy hydrolyzed appreciable amounts of exogenous cerebroside sulfate, whereas fibroblasts from patients with the early-onset form hydrolyzed none. Studies of cell-free preparations showed no cerebroside sulfatase activity. Percy et al. (1977) found that cultured skin fibroblasts from the adult-onset patients, although clearly abnormal, were able to catabolize sulfatide significantly more effectively than cultured skin fibroblasts from late infantile patients.

By the technique of isoelectric focusing on cellulose acetate membranes, Farrell et al. (1979) found differences in arylsulfatase A isozymes that correlated with the clinical type of metachromatic leukodystrophy, i.e., juvenile or late infantile. Chang et al. (1982) showed that fusion of cells from the infantile and juvenile forms of MLD did not result in complementation of arylsulfatase A activity, and concluded that they are allelic disorders.

In the cells from patients with juvenile and adult forms of MLD, von Figura et al. (1983) found severe deficiency in the arylsulfatase polypeptide but a rate of synthesis that was 20 to 50% of control. In the absence of NH4Cl, the mutant enzyme was rapidly degraded upon transport into lysosomes. In the presence of inhibitors of thiol proteases, e.g., leupeptin, arylsulfatase A polypeptides were partially protected from degradation with increase in catalytic activity of arylsulfatase A and improved ability of the cells to degrade cerebroside sulfates. Therapeutic use of this approach was suggested. The approach might be useful in other lysosomal storage diseases in which an unstable mutant enzyme is produced, e.g., the late form of glycogen storage disease II (232300). In a study of 8 patients with the juvenile form of MLD, von Figura et al. (1986) found that the mutation leads to the synthesis of arylsulfatase A polypeptides with increased susceptibility to cysteine proteinases. Multiple allelic mutations within this group were suggested by clinical heterogeneity, variability in residual activity, and response to inhibitors (cysteine proteinases).

Pseudoarylsulfatase A deficiency

Pseudoarylsulfatase A deficiency refers to a condition of apparent ARSA enzyme deficiency in persons without neurologic abnormalities. Dubois et al. (1977) described very low arylsulfatase A and cerebroside sulfatase activities in leukocytes of healthy members of a metachromatic leukodystrophy family. Langenbeck et al. (1977) proposed a one locus, multiple allele hypothesis to explain the peculiar findings in that kindred.

Butterworth et al. (1978) reported a child with very low levels of the enzyme whose mother was, seemingly, heterozygous and whose father carried a variant gene giving a very low in vitro level. They concluded that low arylsulfatase A is not necessarily indicative of this disease, which should be taken into consideration when screening for the disease.

A pseudodeficiency allele at the arylsulfatase A locus was delineated by Schaap et al. (1981). Clinically healthy persons with ARSA levels in the range of MLD patients have been found among the relatives of MLD patients. Cultured fibroblasts from persons with pseudodeficiency catabolize cerebroside sulfate; fibroblasts from MLD patients do not. Zlotogora and Bach (1983) pointed out that lysosomal hydrolases deficient in cases of metachromatic leukodystrophy, Tay-Sachs disease, Fabry disease, and Krabbe disease have also been found to be deficient in healthy persons. The authors suggested that most of the latter cases represent the compound heterozygote for the deficient allele and another allele coding for an in vitro low enzyme activity (pseudodeficiency).

Chang and Davidson (1983) could demonstrate no restoration of activity of arylsulfatase A in hybrid cells created from cells of individuals with MLD and individuals with pseudo-ARSA deficiency. They concluded, therefore, that the 2 mutations are allelic. They showed that the 2 conditions can be distinguished in the laboratory by a simple electrophoretic analysis of residual ARSA activity.

Kihara et al. (1986) noted that the apparent enzyme deficiency in persons without neurologic abnormalities is due in part to the nonspecificity of the synthetic substrates used for assays and in part to a high redundancy of arylsulfatase A.


Diagnosis

Austin et al. (1964) determined that the defect concerns the lysosomal enzyme arylsulfatase A. Austin's test to demonstrate absence of arylsulfatase A activity in the urine was useful in early diagnosis (Greene et al., 1967). Kaback and Howell (1970) demonstrated profound deficiency of arylsulfatase A in cultured skin fibroblasts of patients and an intermediate deficiency in carriers. Normally enzyme levels are low in midtrimester amniotic cells; hence, homozygotes cannot be reliably identified by amniocentesis.

Prenatal Diagnosis

Poenaru et al. (1988) described a method of first-trimester prenatal diagnosis of metachromatic leukodystrophy using immunoprecipitation-electrophoresis on chorionic villus material.

Baldinger et al. (1987) discussed the complications of genetic counseling and prenatal diagnosis resulting from the occurrence of the pseudodeficiency phenotype.


Clinical Management

Bayever et al. (1985) observed apparent improvement (i.e., continued developmental progress) in a boy with late infantile MLD given a bone marrow transplant from an HLA-identical sister. Krivit et al. (1990) reported improvement in neurophysiologic function and sulfatide metabolism in an affected 10-year-old girl who had received a bone marrow transplant 5 years previously.

Pierson et al. (2008) reported 3 sibs with juvenile MLD who received unrelated umbilical cord blood transplantation at different stages of disease: they were 8, 6, and 4 years old, respectively, at the time of treatment. The 8-year-old boy had an IQ of 59, spasticity, and white matter lesions on MRI before transplant and experienced disease progression after transplant. His 6-year-old brother had an IQ of 88 and moderate white matter lesions before transplant, but remained neurologically stable and showed some improvement in nerve conduction velocity and near resolution of white matter lesions after transplant. His 4-year-old sister had no neurologic impairment or white matter lesions before transplant, and remained normal after transplant. She developed mild white matter lesions about 6 months after transplant, but these resolved within the following 6 months. Pierson et al. (2008) concluded that pretransplantion neurologic status is the best predictor of outcome following cord blood transplant and that cord blood transplant can stop disease progression in MLD.

Wang et al. (2011) described the ACMG standards and guidelines for the diagnostic confirmation and management of presymptomatic individuals with lysosomal storage diseases.

Biffi et al. (2013) performed lentiviral hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gene therapy on 3 asymptomatic children with ARSA deficiency known because of older sibs with early-onset MLD carrying the same mutations. Following myeloablative busulfan conditioning, patients were transduced with hematopoietic stem cells with the lentiviral gene. There was high-level stable engraftment of the transduced HSCs in bone marrow and peripheral blood of all patients at all times tested, with 45 to 80% of bone marrow-derived hematopoietic colonies harboring the vector. ARSA activity was reconstituted to above-normal values in the hematopoietic lineages and in the cerebrospinal fluid. None of the 3 patients had progression of disease at up to 24 months after treatment, even after the time of onset projected from sib cases.

Dali et al. (2020) tested the safety of intrathecal administration of recombinant human arylsulfatase A (rhASA) in 24 children with MLD in an open-label, 38-week study. Patients were assigned to cohorts and treated with either 10, 30, or 100 mg of rhASA every other week. There were no deaths and no drug-related serious adverse events, although 25% of patients had a serious adverse event associated with the intrathecal device or drug delivery method. Ten patients developed treatment-induced anti-rhASA antibodies in serum, but there was no correlation between serum antibody response and adverse events. Dali et al. (2020) found dose- and time-dependent reductions in CSF sulfatide and lysosulfatide levels at all doses, with levels reduced to the normal range in patients receiving the 100 mg dose. Dali et al. (2020) concluded that rhASA was generally well-tolerated at doses up to 100 mg administered every other week.

Kaminski et al. (2020) examined the in vitro uptake of arylsulfatase A by different brain-derived cell lines and primary murine brain cells. Endocytosis of human ASA expressed by Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells was highest in primary murine neurons and astrocytes and lowest in oligodendrocytes. Immature oligodendrocytes were able to endocytose this form of ASA. Mannose 6-phosphate (M6P) was able to inhibit ASA uptake by nonglial cells, indicating that the mechanism of uptake of ASA was through M6P receptor-mediated endocytosis. Primary murine microglial cells were found to employ a combination of M6P-receptors, mannose receptors, and scavenger receptors to endocytose ASA. As opposed to the ASA expressed by CHO cells, ASA expressed by microglial cells was not taken up in an M6P-dependent fashion by mouse embryonic fibroblasts, indicating failure of metabolic cross-correction by receptor-mediated endocytosis.


Molecular Genetics

In patients with MLD, Polten et al. (1991), Gieselmann et al. (1991), Kondo et al. (1991), Bohne et al. (1991), and Fluharty et al. (1991) identified mutations in the ARSA gene (e.g., 607574.0003).

Gieselmann et al. (1994) stated that 31 amino acid substitutions, 1 nonsense mutation, 3 small deletions, 3 splice donor site mutations, and 1 combined missense/splice donor site mutation had been identified in the ARSA gene in metachromatic leukodystrophy. Two of these mutant alleles account for about 25% of MLD alleles each.

Pseudodeficiency Alleles

Gieselmann et al. (1989) determined 2 pseudodeficiency alleles of the ARSA gene (607574.0001-607574.0002).


Genotype/Phenotype Correlations

Hohenschutz et al. (1988) described a probable case of the genetic compound between metachromatic leukodystrophy and pseudodeficiency. The patient developed slight spasticity of the left leg at the age of 36 years and left-sided retrobulbar neuritis at the age of 62, together with slight spasticity of both legs. The diagnosis of encephalomyelitis disseminata was made. There were psychiatric manifestations as well. Based on the facts that the pseudodeficiency allele at the ARSA locus is common (gene frequency = 13.7 to 17%), that genetic compounds between the pseudodeficiency allele and the true deficiency allele may be as frequent as 0.073%, and that the residual enzyme activity may fall below a critical threshold in such individuals, Hohenschutz et al. (1989) suggested that the compound heterozygote genotype might be associated with neuropsychiatric disorders of late onset.

In 34 individuals with low ASA activity, Kappler et al. (1991) identified 3 different classes: homozygosity for the pseudodeficiency allele (ASAp/ASAp) (10 individuals), compound heterozygosity for ASAp and ASA- (6 individuals), and homozygosity of ASA- (16 individuals). The genotypes exhibited different levels of residual ASA activity. ASAp/ASAp was associated with normal sulfatide degrading capacity and a reduced ASA activity that was the highest of the 3 classes (10-50% of normal). ASAp/ASAp subjects showed no evidence of MLD. ASAp/ASA- subjects showed mildly reduced sulfatide degrading capacity and a reduced ASA activity that was in between the other 2 classes (10% of controls). ASAp/ASA- subjects were either healthy or showed mild neurologic abnormalities. ASA-/ASA- subjects showed markedly reduced sulfatide degradation and markedly reduced ASA activity. Only the ASA-/ASA- genotype was associated with the development of both early- and late-onset MLD, including neuropsychiatric symptoms.

Berger et al. (1999) described a family with 3 sibs, 1 of whom developed classic late infantile MLD, fatal at age 5 years, with deficient ARSA activity and increased galactosylsulfatide (GS) excretion. The other 2 sibs, apparently healthy at 12.5 and 15 years, and their father, apparently healthy as well, presented ARSA and GS values within the range of MLD patients. Mutation analysis demonstrated that 3 different ARSA mutations accounted for the intrafamilial phenotypic heterogeneity. One of the mutations, although clearly modifying ARSA and GS levels, apparently had little significance for clinical manifestation of MLD, The results demonstrated that in certain genetic conditions the ARSA and GS values may not be paralleled by clinical disease, a finding with serious diagnostic and prognostic implications. Moreover, further ARSA alleles functionally may exist which, together with 0-type mutations may cause ARSA and GS levels in the pathologic range but no clinical manifestation of the disease.

Regis et al. (2002) identified a late infantile MLD patient carrying on one allele a novel E253K mutation (607574.0044) and the known T391S polymorphism, and on the other allele the common P426L mutation (607574.0004), usually associated with the adult or juvenile form of the disease, and the N350S (607574.0002) and *96A-G pseudodeficiency mutations. To analyze the contribution of mutations based on the same allele to enzyme activity reduction, as well as the possible phenotype implications, they performed transient expression experiments using ARSA cDNAs carrying the identified mutations separately or in combination. Their results indicated that mutants carrying multiple mutations cause greater reduction of ARSA activity than do the corresponding single mutants, the total deficiency likely corresponding to the sum of the reductions attributed to each mutation. Consequently, each mutation may contribute to the ARSA activity reduction, and, therefore, to the degree of disease severity. This is particularly important for the alleles containing a disease-causing mutation and the pseudodeficiency mutations: in these alleles pseudodeficiency could play a role in affecting the clinical phenotype.

Rauschka et al. (2006) evaluated 42 patients with late-onset MLD, 22 of whom were homozygous for the P426L mutation and 20 of whom were compound heterozygous for I179S (607574.0008) and another pathogenic ARSA mutation. Patients homozygous for the P426L mutation presented with progressive gait disturbance caused by spastic paraparesis or cerebellar ataxia; mental disturbance was absent or insignificant at disease onset but became more apparent as the disease evolved. Peripheral nerve conduction velocities were decreased. In contrast, patients who were heterozygous for I179S presented with schizophrenia-like behavior changes, social dysfunction, and mental decline, but motor deficits were scarce. There was less residual ARSA activity in those with P426L mutations compared to those with I179S mutations.

Biffi et al. (2008) reported 26 patients with MLD who were classified clinically according to age at onset into late-infantile (17), early juvenile (6), late-juvenile (2), and adult (1). These patients were found to carry 18 mutations in the ARSA gene, including 10 rare and 8 novel mutations, that were classified as null '0' alleles lacking residual activity and 'R' alleles with residual activity. The null/null homozygous patients were the most severely affected with severe clinical manifestations, profound motor and cognitive deficits, and rapid disease progression. Patients who were null/R compound heterozygous showed a similar presentation and disease evolution, although less rapid, to null/null homozygotes. Despite some variability, all R/R homozygous patients showed a milder disease burden and slower progression when compared with null/null and null/R subjects. Biffi et al. (2008) observed early involvement of the peripheral nervous system in all patients with at least 1 null allele, and the authors suggested that evaluation of nerve conduction velocities could be used as a frontline test for all MLD patients,


Population Genetics

Although MLD occurs panethnically, with an estimated frequency of 1/40,000, Heinisch et al. (1995) found it to be more frequent among Arabs living in 2 restricted areas in Israel. Ten families with affected children were found, 3 in the Jerusalem region and 7 in a small area in lower Galilee. Whereas all patients from the Jerusalem region were homozygous for the splice donor site mutation at the border of exon/intron 2 (607574.0003), 5 different mutations were found in the 7 families from lower Galilee, all of them in homozygous state. Two of the families were Muslim Arabs and 2 were Christian Arabs. Four different haplotypes were represented by the 5 mutations. Zlotogora et al. (1994) studied the ARSA haplotypes defined by 3 intragenic polymorphic sites in 3 Muslim Arab families and 1 Christian Arab family from Jerusalem with the splice donor site mutation at the border of exon/intron 2. The parents were first cousins in all 4 families, but no relationship between these families was known. All 4 patients had the same haplotype, i.e., BglI(1), BamHI(1), BsrI(1), which is rare (3.9%) in the general population. Zlotogora et al. (1994) found the same haplotype in 8 non-Arab patients from the US and Europe who were homozygous for this allele. The strong association between this mutation and haplotype suggested a common origin for the mutation, which may have been introduced into Jerusalem at the time of the Crusades.

Holve et al. (2001) found that cases of MLD among Navajo Indians were clustered in a portion of the western Navajo Nation to which a small number of Navajo fled after armed conflict with the United States Army in the 1860s. The observed incidence of MLD in that region was 1/2,520 live births, with an estimated carrier frequency of 1/25 to 1/50. No cases were observed in the eastern part of the Navajo Nation over a period of 18 years (60,000 births). Bottleneck and founder effect from the mid-19th century could explain the high incidence of MLD as well as a number of other heritable disorders among the Navajo.

In Israel, Herz and Bach (1984) estimated the frequency of the pseudodeficiency allele to be about 15%. In a Spanish population, Chabas et al. (1993) estimated the frequency of the pseudodeficiency allele to be 12.7%.

In a retrospective hospital- and clinic-based study involving 122 children with an inherited leukodystrophy, Bonkowsky et al. (2010) found that the most common diagnoses were metachromatic leukodystrophy (8.2%), Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (312080) (7.4%), mitochondrial diseases (4.9%), and adrenoleukodystrophy (300100) (4.1%). No final diagnosis was reported in 51% of patients. The disorder was severe: epilepsy was found in 49%, mortality was 34%, and the average age at death was 8.2 years. The population incidence of leukodystrophy in general was found to be 1 in 7,663 live births.


History

Yatziv and Russell (1981) reported 3 adult sibs of Sephardic Jewish extraction who had a form of primary dystonia with onset in childhood. There was a marked deficiency of arylsulfatase A in urine, leukocytes, and fibroblasts. The clinically normal parents both showed a 50% reduction in ARSA activity. Yatziv and Russell (1981) reported the disorder in this family as an 'unusual form of metachromatic leukodystrophy,' but Khan et al. (2003) later reported that genetic analysis of the family indicated pseudoarylsulfatase A deficiency: the mother and all 3 sibs were homozygous, and the father was heterozygous, for the polyA pseudodeficiency allele (607574.0001). Khan et al. (2003) diagnosed the family with autosomal recessive primary dystonia (DYT2; 224500); Charlesworth et al. (2015) identified a homozygous missense mutation in the HPCA gene (N75K; 142622.0001) in the affected individuals, thus confirming the diagnosis.


Animal Model

Since no naturally occurring animal model of metachromatic leukodystrophy is available, Hess et al. (1996) generated Arsa-deficient mice by targeted disruption of the gene in embryonic stem cells. Deficient animals stored the sphingolipid cerebroside-3-sulfate in various neuronal and nonneuronal tissues. Storage pattern was comparable with that in affected humans, but gross defect of white matter with progressive demyelination was not observed up to the age of 2 years. Reduction of axonal cross-sectional area and astrogliosis were observed in 1-year-old mice; activation of microglia started at 1 year and was generalized at 2 years. Purkinje cell dendrites showed altered morphology. In the acoustic ganglion numbers of neurons and myelinated fibers were severely decreased, which was accompanied by loss of brainstem auditory-evoked potentials. Neurologic examination demonstrated significant impairment of neuromotor coordination.

Matzner et al. (2005) treated Arsa-knockout mice by intravenous injection of recombinant human ARSA. Uptake of injected enzyme was high into liver, moderate into peripheral nervous system (PNS) and kidney, and very low into brain. A single injection led to a time- and dose-dependent decline of the excess sulfatide in PNS and kidney by up to 70%, but no reduction was seen in brain. Four weekly injections of 20 mg/kg body weight not only reduced storage in peripheral tissues progressively, but also reduced sulfatide storage in brain and spinal cord. Histopathology of kidney and central nervous system was ameliorated. Improved neuromotor coordination capabilities and normalized peripheral compound motor action potential suggested benefit of enzyme replacement therapy on nervous system function.


See Also:

Austin (1967); Austin et al. (1965); Beratis et al. (1975); Black and Cumings (1961); Bosch and Hart (1978); Bruns et al. (1978); Chang and Davidson (1980); Cravioto et al. (1967); DeLuca et al. (1979); DeLuca et al. (1977); Eto et al. (1982); Farrell (1981); Goebel et al. (1977); Hagberg et al. (1962); Haltia et al. (1980); Jervis (1960); Percy and Brady (1968); Pilz et al. (1977); Porter et al. (1971); Quigley and Green (1976); Sanguinetti et al. (1986); Sourander and Svennerholm (1962); Tonnesen et al. (1983); Tonnesen et al. (1984); Van Bogaert and Dewulf (1939); Zlotogora et al. (1980)

REFERENCES

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Contributors:
Hilary J. Vernon - updated : 09/30/2021
Hilary J. Vernon - updated : 09/30/2020
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 4/28/2015
Ada Hamosh - updated : 1/6/2014
Ada Hamosh - updated : 10/3/2012
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 10/20/2010
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 6/26/2009
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 2/13/2009
George E. Tiller - updated : 5/19/2008
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 7/31/2007
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 6/27/2005
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 2/3/2004
Cassandra L. Kniffin - reorganized : 2/28/2003
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 1/28/2003
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 8/27/2002
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 5/13/2002
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 7/31/2001
Majed J. Dasouki - updated : 4/13/2001
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 1/12/1999
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 9/29/1998
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 9/18/1998
Clair A. Francomano - updated : 5/27/1998
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 12/2/1997
Victor A. McKusick - updated : 5/8/1997
Iosif W. Lurie - updated : 9/15/1996
Stylianos E. Antonarakis - updated : 7/6/1996

Creation Date:
Victor A. McKusick : 6/4/1986

Edit History:
carol : 09/30/2021
alopez : 02/19/2021
carol : 09/30/2020
carol : 10/14/2016
carol : 07/09/2016
carol : 5/27/2016
alopez : 5/1/2015
mcolton : 4/30/2015
ckniffin : 4/28/2015
alopez : 1/6/2014
alopez : 10/3/2012
wwang : 10/29/2010
ckniffin : 10/20/2010
wwang : 7/23/2009
ckniffin : 6/26/2009
terry : 3/5/2009
wwang : 2/19/2009
ckniffin : 2/13/2009
wwang : 5/21/2008
terry : 5/19/2008
carol : 1/21/2008
wwang : 8/23/2007
ckniffin : 7/31/2007
wwang : 7/1/2005
wwang : 6/29/2005
ckniffin : 6/27/2005
terry : 2/22/2005
carol : 11/18/2004
tkritzer : 2/9/2004
ckniffin : 2/3/2004
ckniffin : 2/3/2004
carol : 2/28/2003
ckniffin : 2/27/2003
ckniffin : 2/27/2003
ckniffin : 2/27/2003
carol : 2/10/2003
tkritzer : 1/31/2003
ckniffin : 1/28/2003
tkritzer : 9/10/2002
tkritzer : 8/30/2002
terry : 8/27/2002
terry : 8/27/2002
alopez : 5/16/2002
terry : 5/13/2002
cwells : 8/10/2001
cwells : 8/1/2001
terry : 7/31/2001
carol : 4/13/2001
carol : 9/22/1999
carol : 4/2/1999
carol : 1/14/1999
terry : 1/12/1999
carol : 9/30/1998
terry : 9/29/1998
carol : 9/22/1998
terry : 9/18/1998
dkim : 9/10/1998
carol : 7/16/1998
carol : 6/19/1998
terry : 6/16/1998
terry : 6/16/1998
terry : 6/3/1998
dholmes : 5/28/1998
dholmes : 5/27/1998
dholmes : 5/21/1998
mark : 12/9/1997
terry : 12/2/1997
terry : 12/2/1997
alopez : 7/10/1997
terry : 7/9/1997
jenny : 6/23/1997
mark : 6/23/1997
jenny : 6/17/1997
mark : 6/17/1997
mark : 5/8/1997
alopez : 5/6/1997
jamie : 1/7/1997
jamie : 1/7/1997
terry : 1/3/1997
carol : 9/15/1996
mark : 11/6/1995
pfoster : 9/30/1994
davew : 6/3/1994
terry : 4/18/1994
mimadm : 4/17/1994
warfield : 3/9/1994