Armstrong Dawna Duncan
The Blue Bird Circle Rett Center, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
J Child Neurol. 2005 Sep;20(9):747-53. doi: 10.1177/08830738050200090901.
Rett syndrome is a sporadic disorder (except for a few familial cases) occurring in 1 in 10,000 to 1 in 23,000 girls worldwide. It is associated with profound mental and motor handicap. About 90% of cases involve a mutation in the methyl-CpG binding protein 2 gene (MECP2). The role of this gene in the pathogenesis of this enigmatic disorder is being extensively investigated in animal models. Rett syndrome is associated with a complex phenotype that is unique in every aspect of its presentation, clinical physiology, chemistry, and pathology. Years of concentrated observations have defined the clinical presentation of classic Rett syndrome and its variants and related features (eg, neurophysiologic, radiologic, chemical, metabolic, and anatomic). This article reviews the neuropathology of Rett syndrome, which involves individual neurons, perhaps selected neurons, of decreased size, dendritic branching, and numbers of spines. This article also summarizes the studies in the human and mouse brain with Rett syndrome that are beginning to reveal the disorder's pathoetiology.
雷特综合征是一种散发性疾病(少数为家族性病例),全球每10000至23000名女孩中就有1例发病。它与严重的智力和运动障碍有关。约90%的病例涉及甲基-CpG结合蛋白2基因(MECP2)突变。该基因在这种神秘疾病发病机制中的作用正在动物模型中进行广泛研究。雷特综合征具有复杂的表型,在其临床表现、临床生理学、化学和病理学的各个方面都独一无二。多年的集中观察已经明确了经典雷特综合征及其变异型的临床表现以及相关特征(如神经生理学、放射学、化学、代谢和解剖学特征)。本文综述了雷特综合征的神经病理学,其涉及单个神经元,可能是特定的神经元,这些神经元体积减小、树突分支减少且棘突数量减少。本文还总结了针对人类和小鼠大脑中雷特综合征的研究,这些研究开始揭示该疾病的病因。