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Glycine encephalopathy



Glycine encephalopathy, which is also known as nonketotic hyperglycinemia or NKH, is a genetic disorder characterized by abnormally high levels of the amino acid glycine. Glycine acts as a neurotransmitter, which is a chemical messenger that transmits signals in the brain. Glycine encephalopathy is caused by the shortage of an enzyme that normally breaks down glycine in the body. A lack of this enzyme allows excess glycine to build up in tissues and organs, particularly the brain, leading to serious medical problems.

Contents

Types

Classic neonatal form or classic form

Most patients with GCE have the neonatal phenotype, presenting in the first few days of life with lethargy, hypotonia, and myoclonic jerks,and progressing to apnea, and often to death. Those who regain spontaneous respiration develop intractable seizures and profound mental retardation.

Infantile form

Patients present with seizures and have various degrees of mental retardation after a symptom-free interval and seemingly normal development for up to 6 months.

Mild-episodic form

Patients present in childhood with mild mental retardation and episodes of delirium, chorea, and vertical gaze palsy during febrile illness.

Late-onset form

Patients present in childhood with progressive spastic diplegia and optic atrophy, but intellectual function is preserved and seizures have not been reported

Atypical form

Unlike the classic neonatal form of the disorder, atypical or mild glycine encephalopathy is phenotypically heterogeneous and nonspecific, making diagnosis difficult. The occurrence of an expressive speech deficit and neurologic abnormalities during intercurrent infections as striking features of the milder form of the disease.

Transient Form

Transient neonatal hyperglycinemia (TNH) is characterized by elevated plasma and CSF glycine levels at birth that are normalized within 2 to 8 weeks. TNH is clinically and biochemically indistinguishable from typical nonketotic hyperglycinemia at onset.

Genetics

Mutations in the AMT and GLDC genes cause glycine encephalopathy. About 80 percent of cases of glycine encephalopathy result from mutations in the GLDC gene, while AMT mutations cause 10 percent to 15 percent of all cases. In a small percentage of affected individuals, the cause of this condition is unknown.

The AMT and GLDC genes provide instructions for making proteins that work together as part of a larger enzyme complex. This complex, known as glycine cleavage enzyme, is responsible for breaking down glycine into smaller pieces. Mutations in either the AMT or GLDC gene prevent the complex from breaking down glycine properly. When glycine cleavage enzyme is defective, excess glycine can build up to toxic levels in the body's organs and tissues. Damage caused by harmful amounts of this molecule in the brain and spinal cord is responsible for the mental retardation, seizures, and breathing difficulties characteristic of glycine encephalopathy.

This condition is inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern, which means two copies of the gene in each cell are altered. Most often, the parents of an individual with an autosomal recessive disorder each carry one copy of the altered gene but do not show signs and symptoms of the disorder.

See also

References

  • National Library of Medicine. Glycine encephalopathy
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Glycine_encephalopathy". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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