Unit on Human Copper Metabolism, Molecular Medicine Program, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892‐1853, USA.
Mol Genet Metab. 2012 Sep;107(1-2):222-8. doi: 10.1016/j.ymgme.2012.05.008. Epub 2012 May 18.
Menkes disease is a lethal X-linked recessive neurodegenerative disorder of copper transport caused by mutations in ATP7A, which encodes a copper-transporting ATPase. Early postnatal treatment with copper injections often improves clinical outcomes in affected infants. While Menkes disease newborns appear normal neurologically, analyses of fetal tissues including placenta indicate abnormal copper distribution and suggest a prenatal onset of the metal transport defect. In an affected fetus whose parents found termination unacceptable and who understood the associated risks, we began in utero copper histidine treatment at 31.5 weeks gestational age. Copper histidine (900 μg per dose) was administered directly to the fetus by intramuscular injection (fetal quadriceps or gluteus) under ultrasound guidance. Percutaneous umbilical blood sampling enabled serial measurement of fetal copper and ceruloplasmin levels that were used to guide therapy over a four-week period. Fetal copper levels rose from 17 μg/dL prior to treatment to 45 μg/dL, and ceruloplasmin levels from 39 mg/L to 122 mg/L. After pulmonary maturity was confirmed biochemically, the baby was delivered at 35.5 weeks and daily copper histidine therapy (250 μg sc b.i.d.) was begun. Despite this very early intervention with copper, the infant showed hypotonia, developmental delay, and electroencephalographic abnormalities and died of respiratory failure at 5.5 months of age. The patient's ATP7A mutation (Q724H), which severely disrupted mRNA splicing, resulted in complete absence of ATP7A protein on Western blots. These investigations suggest that prenatally initiated copper replacement is inadequate to correct Menkes disease caused by severe loss-of-function mutations, and that postnatal ATP7A gene addition represents a rational approach in such circumstances.
Menkes 病是一种致命的 X 连锁隐性神经退行性铜转运疾病,由 ATP7A 基因突变引起,该基因编码一种铜转运 ATP 酶。对受影响的婴儿进行产后早期铜注射治疗通常可以改善临床结果。虽然 Menkes 病新生儿在神经学上看起来正常,但对包括胎盘在内的胎儿组织的分析表明铜分布异常,并提示金属转运缺陷的产前发病。在一对父母无法接受终止妊娠且了解相关风险的受影响胎儿中,我们在 31.5 孕周时开始对胎儿进行铜组氨酸宫内治疗。铜组氨酸(每次剂量 900μg)在超声引导下通过肌肉内注射(胎儿股四头肌或臀肌)直接给予胎儿。经皮脐带血采样使我们能够连续测量胎儿铜和铜蓝蛋白水平,这些水平用于指导四周的治疗。胎儿铜水平从治疗前的 17μg/dL 上升到 45μg/dL,铜蓝蛋白水平从 39mg/L 上升到 122mg/L。在生化上确认肺成熟后,婴儿在 35.5 孕周时分娩,并开始每日接受铜组氨酸治疗(250μg sc b.i.d.)。尽管进行了非常早期的铜干预,但婴儿仍表现出张力减退、发育迟缓、脑电图异常,并在 5.5 个月时因呼吸衰竭而死亡。患者的 ATP7A 突变(Q724H)严重破坏了 mRNA 剪接,导致 Western 印迹上完全缺乏 ATP7A 蛋白。这些研究表明,产前启动的铜替代不足以纠正由严重功能丧失突变引起的 Menkes 病,并且在这种情况下,产后 ATP7A 基因添加代表了一种合理的方法。