Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:4.1.1.6 (
CAD
)
4,420
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Unexplained global developmental delay and epilepsy in childhood pose a major socioeconomic burden. Progress in defining the molecular bases does not often translate into effective treatment. Notable exceptions include certain inborn errors of metabolism amenable to dietary intervention.
CAD
encodes a multifunctional enzyme involved in de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis. Alternatively, pyrimidines can be recycled from uridine. Exome sequencing in three families identified biallelic
CAD
mutations in four children with global developmental delay, epileptic
encephalopathy
, and anaemia with anisopoikilocytosis. Two died aged 4 and 5 years after a neurodegenerative disease course. Supplementation of the two surviving children with oral uridine led to immediate cessation of seizures in both. A 4-year-old female, previously in a minimally conscious state, began to communicate and walk with assistance after 9 weeks of treatment. A 3-year-old female likewise showed developmental progress. Blood smears normalized and anaemia resolved. We establish
CAD
as a gene confidently implicated in this neurometabolic disorder, characterized by co-occurrence of global developmental delay, dyserythropoietic anaemia and seizures. While the natural disease course can be lethal in early childhood, our findings support the efficacy of uridine supplementation, rendering
CAD
deficiency a treatable neurometabolic disorder and therefore a potential condition for future (genetic) newborn screening.
...
PMID:CAD mutations and uridine-responsive epileptic encephalopathy. 2800 89
Mutations in more than 70 genes cause hereditary anemias (HA), a highly heterogeneous group of rare/low frequency disorders in which we included: hyporegenerative anemias, as congenital dyserythropoietic anemia (CDA) and Diamond-Blackfan anemia; hemolytic anemias due to erythrocyte membrane defects, as hereditary spherocytosis and stomatocytosis; hemolytic anemias due to enzymatic defects. The study describes the diagnostic workflow for HA, based on the development of two consecutive versions of a targeted-NGS panel, including 34 and 71 genes, respectively. Seventy-four probands from 62 unrelated families were investigated. Our study includes the most comprehensive gene set for these anemias and the largest cohort of patients described so far. We obtained an overall diagnostic yield of 64.9%. Despite 54.2% of cases showed conclusive diagnosis fitting well to the clinical suspicion, the multi-gene analysis modified the original clinical diagnosis in 45.8% of patients (nonmatched phenotype-genotype). Of note, 81.8% of nonmatched patients were clinically suspected to suffer from CDA. Particularly, 45.5% of the probands originally classified as CDA exhibited a conclusive diagnosis of chronic anemia due to enzymatic defects, mainly due to mutations in PKLR gene. Interestingly, we also identified a syndromic CDA patient with mild anemia and epilepsy, showing a homozygous mutation in
CAD
gene, recently associated to early infantile epileptic
encephalopathy
-50 and CDA-like anemia. Finally, we described a patient showing marked iron overload due to the coinheritance of PIEZO1 and SEC23B mutations, demonstrating that the multi-gene approach is valuable not only for achieving a correct and definitive diagnosis, but also for guiding treatment.
...
PMID:Multi-gene panel testing improves diagnosis and management of patients with hereditary anemias. 2939 46
Refractory epilepsy and
encephalopathy
are frequently encountered in patients with inborn errors of metabolism. We report a case of an 8-year-old girl with history of developmental delay, autism and intractable epilepsy that was found to have a pathogenic variant in
CAD
. We briefly review the biochemical pathway of
CAD
and the preclinical and clinical studies that suggest uridine supplementation can rescue the
CAD
deficiency phenotypes. Our case demonstrates a relatively late-onset case of refractory epilepsy with a rapid response to treatment using the uridine pro-drug triacetyluridine (TAU), the FDA-approved treatment for hereditary orotic aciduria.
...
PMID:Triacetyluridine treats epileptic encephalopathy from CAD mutations: a case report and review. 3324 80