Division of Bone and Mineral Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA; Shriners Hospitals for Children-St. Louis, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Bone. 2023 Apr;169:116684. doi: 10.1016/j.bone.2023.116684. Epub 2023 Jan 27.
Carbonic anhydrase II deficiency (OMIM # 259730), initially called "osteopetrosis with renal tubular acidosis and cerebral calcification syndrome", reveals an important role for the enzyme carbonic anhydrase II (CA II) in osteoclast and renal tubule function. Discovered in 1972 and subsequently given various names, CA II deficiency now describes >100 affected individuals encountered predominantly from the Middle East and Mediterranean region. In 1983, CA II deficiency emerged as the first osteopetrosis (OPT) understood metabolically, and in 1991 the first understood molecularly. CA II deficiency is the paradigm OPT featuring failure of osteoclasts to resorb bone due to inability to acidify their pericellular milieu. The disorder presents late in infancy or early in childhood with fracturing, developmental delay, weakness, short stature, and/or cranial nerve compression and palsy. Mental retardation is common. The skeletal findings may improve by adult life, and CA II deficiency can be associated with a normal life-span. Therefore, it has been considered an "intermediate" type of OPT. In CA II deficiency, OPT is uniquely accompanied by renal tubular acidosis (RTA) of proximal, distal, or combined type featuring hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis, rarely with hypokalemia and paralysis. Cerebral calcification uniquely appears in early childhood. The etiology is bi-allelic loss-of-function mutations of CA2 that encodes CA II. Prenatal diagnosis requires mutational analysis of CA2. Although this enzymopathy reveals how CA II is important for the skeleton and kidney tubule, the pathogenesis of the mental subnormality and cerebral calcification is less well understood. Several mouse models of CA II deficiency have shown growth hormone deficiency, yet currently there is no standard pharmacologic therapy for patients. Treatment of the systemic acidosis is often begun when growth is complete. Although CA II deficiency is an "osteoclast-rich" OPT, and therefore transplantation of healthy osteoclasts can improve the skeletal disease, the RTA and central nervous system difficulties persist.
碳酸酐酶 II 缺乏症(OMIM#259730),最初被称为“伴有肾小管酸中毒和脑钙化的成骨不全症”,揭示了酶碳酸酐酶 II(CA II)在破骨细胞和肾小管功能中的重要作用。该疾病于 1972 年被发现,随后被赋予了各种名称,目前已发现超过 100 例受影响的个体,主要来自中东和地中海地区。1983 年,CA II 缺乏症成为第一种代谢理解的成骨不全症(OPT),1991 年成为第一种分子理解的 OPT。CA II 缺乏症是 OPT 的典范,其特征是破骨细胞由于无法酸化细胞外环境而无法吸收骨。该疾病在婴儿后期或儿童早期出现,表现为骨折、发育迟缓、虚弱、身材矮小和/或颅神经压迫和瘫痪。智力障碍很常见。骨骼表现可能会在成年后改善,CA II 缺乏症可与正常寿命相关。因此,它被认为是一种“中间”类型的 OPT。在 CA II 缺乏症中,OPT 独特地伴有近端、远端或混合型肾小管酸中毒(RTA),其特征为高氯代谢性酸中毒,很少伴有低钾血症和瘫痪。脑钙化仅在儿童早期出现。病因是编码 CA II 的 CA2 的双等位基因功能丧失突变。产前诊断需要 CA2 的突变分析。尽管这种酶病揭示了 CA II 对骨骼和肾小管的重要性,但智力低下和脑钙化的发病机制尚不清楚。几种 CA II 缺乏症的小鼠模型显示生长激素缺乏症,但目前患者尚无标准的药物治疗方法。当生长完成后,通常开始治疗全身酸中毒。尽管 CA II 缺乏症是一种“破骨细胞丰富”的 OPT,因此移植健康的破骨细胞可以改善骨骼疾病,但 RTA 和中枢神经系统问题仍然存在。