vcu home pagepathology home page

 

 

NEUROPATHOLOGY FOR MEDICAL STUDENTS

Presented by William I. Rosenblum, MD

CHAPTER 4--SECTION ABOUT LEUKODYSTROPHIES. IT IS SECTION THREE IN A CHAPTER CONCERNING DEMYELINATING DISEASES; LEUKODYSTROPHIES; STORAGE DISEASES INVOLVING MYELIN OR NEURONS

This chapter contains four interrelated sections.LINKS TO THE OTHER 3 SECTIONS CAN BE FOUND AT THE END OF THIS PARAGRAPH. These sections are related because some  diseases of myelin are storage diseases and some storage diseases involve not  myelin primarily but the neuron instead. In many cases the storage diseases are related  in the sense that they depend upon  a lack of an enzyme normally found in lysosomes, or sometimes in peroxisiomes. Each enzyme  deficiency disease is characterized by its own enzyme deficiency, but the fact that  lysosomal enzymes are involved has led many writers to lump these diseases together as  lysosomal disorders. The problem with this method of classification is that it loses the distinction  between diseases primarily affecting  grey matter [neuronal cell bodies] and diseases primarily affecting white matter [myelin]. Since this anatomic difference helps make  a diagnosis when the brain is examined by imaging or at autopsy and also  has some effect on early symptoms, we prefer to emphasize the older classification of white matter diseases [ADE, MS and leukodystrophies] on the one hand and the  other storage diseases which have been called neuronal lipidoses on the other. Indeed a traditional term for the neuronal storage diseases has been the term "lipidoses". Because of the pathogenetic similarity between some of the leukodystrophies [white matter lipid storage or lysosomal disorders of white matter] and the neruonal lipidoses [lysosomal disorders] we have included a section concerning the latter in this chapter.The other three sections are:

Section 1 - Acute Disseminated Encephalomyelitis
Section 2 - Multiple Sclerosis
Section 4 - Neuronal Lipidoses

Section 3: Leukodystrophies

PRETEST: Answers can be found in the text of this section or click on link at end of questions

  1. Name 2 leukodystrophies and their enzyme deficiencies.
  2. What histologic hallmarks distinguish these 2 diseases.
  3. What medical benefits have come from the discovery of the enzymatic defects?
  4. Excessive deposition of Rosenthal fibers characterizes which leukodstrophy.
  5. Spongiform change especially in the subcortical white matter distinguishes ___________'s disease.
  6. What is the most common storage disease produced by a missing peroxisomal enzyme?

ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS

PATHOLOGY

METACHROMATIC LEUKODYSTROPHY

Metachromatic leukodystrophy is characterized by deficient [in some cases] or dysfunctional [in other cases] aryl sulfatase. As a result, sulfatides are not broken down and are found in large amounts in astrocytes and macrophages. The sulfatide is metachromatic--that is, it causes a shift in the color of a dye--and this histologic characteristic has given the disease its name. 

In fully developed lesions, oligoglia are sparse or absent. Presumably they were adversely affected by the metabolic defect and/or storage of sulfatide. The injury to oligoglia is thought to account for the disappearance or absence of myelin, since these glial cells normally form the myelin. 

In addition to myelin loss, axon loss is often severe (presumably a secondary effect of myelin loss or glial injury) and astrocytosis is marked.

KRABBE'S DISEASE OR GLOBOID LEUKODYSTROPHY

Krabbe's disease is characterized by deficient galactosidase and accumulation of galactocerebroside in some cells. However, unlike typical storage diseases, overall tissue levels of the affected lipid are not increased. 

Moreover, the accumulating cerebroside may not be the cause of tissue destruction. Instead, levels of psychosine, a toxin, are increased during the abnormal metabolism and may be responsible for the damage.

As in other leukodystrophies, cases of Krabbe's disease display degenerated white matter, with absence or diminution in myelin, loss of axons, loss of oligodendroglia and astrocytosis.

The galactocerebroside is stored in macrophages which may cluster together or fuse to form diagnostic "globoid" bodies (image below) which give the disease its name. Arrows delineate such a body on the image below. Injections of cerebroside into the brains of animals produce similar bodies. This effect is not produced by injections of other brain lipids.

picture

Recently doctors have successfully treated infants at risk for globoid leukodystrophy by intravascular injection of cord blood from normal newborns. Mononuclear cells from the cord blood enter the brain and produce sufficient cerebrosidase to ameliorate the symptoms. This technique--and presumably stem cells injected intravascularly-overcomes the difficulties of trying to treat enzyme deficiency diseases by injecting the patient with enzyme. In the latter situation enzyme may not pass the blood brain barrier and, moreover, the recipient may develop antibodies to the protein thereby

 

CANAVAN'S DISEASE

The next disease we will discuss is Canavan's disease or spongiform leukodystrophy. This disease involves all the white matter, but particularly the "U" fibers or arcuate zone which lies immediately beneath the cortex. The affected area is demarcated by Xs in the image below. In th epicture the t0otally demyelinated , areas are not stained. The remaining, but degenerating myelin is filled with small holes giving it a "spongy" appearance.An enzyme defect has been uncovered in this very rare disease. The deficient enzyme , acetylaspartase, breaks down N-acetylaspartic acid. The latter is an important constituent of neurons. Since the enzyme which breaks it down is missing, the aspartate builds up in the neurons. However, the aspartase is not localized in the neurons. Instead it is found in the oligodendroglia. The aspartate is normally transported down the axons, and in some way is made available for breakdown by the oligodendroglial enzyme. Why the absence of the enzyme in the latter should lead to myelin breakdown is not known. But it has been postulated that  the accumulation of the aspartate in the white matter  leads to increased osmotic pressure there with consequent drawing of water into the surrounding tissue. It has been further postulated that in some way this leads to the degeneration of the myelin.

picture

The disease is presented because it illustrates the fact that all leukodystrophies are not caused by intraneuronal or intraglial storage per se and because its pathology is illustrative of a very unusual type of ultrastructural lesion.

picture

When studied with the electron microscope, the myelin sheath  appears to be "unraveling" the lamellae becoming widely separated. An electron microscopic picture of the large spaces between widely separated myelin lamellae is shown above. The large spaces appearing between the billowing lamellar sheets are the cause of the spongy appearance seen with the light microscope. It is the sponginess of the tissue that has given the disease one of its names.

 ALEXANDER'S DISEASE

The last disease we will discuss is Alexander's disease. This rare leukodystrophy exists in several forms, depending upon the age of onset. In several forms abnormalities in the gene coding for glial fibrillary acidic protein have been found. This is the first disease in which the gene for GFAP has been implicated. This may explain a characteristic feature of the disease which is the accumulation in the degenerated white matter of large numbers of Rosenthal fibers and eosinophilic granular bodies. These structures are large accumulations of astrocytic processes "clumped" together. 

The relationship, if any, of the astrocytic abnormality to the degeneration of myelin or its failure to form normally, or to the selection of white matter as the preferential target of the disease, has not been elucidated.

PEROXISOMAL DISORDERS

The peroxisome is another ultrastructural cytoplasmic organelle that contains catabolic enzymes. The deficiency of one of these enzymes leads to adrenoleukodsytrophy. This disorder is characterized by characteristic curvilinear bodies in affected adrenal cells and brain cells which are swollen contain stored very long chain fatty acids.

TESTING PATIENTS AND PROSPECTIVE PARENTS

Discovery of the enzymatic defect is extremely important. These defects are expressed in many cells, e.g., white blood cells or cells in amniotic fluid. Examination of these cells provides a rapid, definitive means of diagnosing the disease and often its carriers. These facts provide a basis for genetic counseling prior to a decision concerning the advisability of conceiving a child and provide a basis for informed decisions concerning termination of pregnancy.

Last Updated 15-May-2007