Unclassified four-repeat tauopathy associated with familial parkinsonism and progressive respiratory failure.
Masayoshi NakanoYuichi RikuKenya NishiokaMasato HasegawaYukihiko WashimiYutaka ArahataAkinori TakedaKentaro HoribeAkiko YamaokaKeisuke SuzukiMasashi TsujimotoYuanzhe LiHiroyo YoshinoNobutaka HattoriAkio AkagiHiroaki MiyaharaYasushi IwasakiMari YoshidaPublished in: Acta neuropathologica communications (2020)
We describe an autopsied patient with familial parkinsonism and unclassified four repeat-tau (4R-tau) aggregation. She presented with bradykinesia, truncal dystonia, and mild amnesia at the age of 61 and then exhibited body weight loss (15 kg over 8 months), sleep disturbances, and progressive respiratory failure with CO2 narcosis. She died of respiratory failure at the age of 62, 14 months after disease onset. Her brother also showed parkinsonism at the age of 58 and suddenly died 6 months later. Postmortem examination revealed 4R-tau aggregation, which was characterized by neuronal globose-type tangles or pretangles, bush-like or miscellaneous astrocytic inclusions, and coiled bodies. The temporal tip, the striatum, the substantia nigra, the tegmentum of the midbrain, the medullary reticular formation, and the spinal cord were severely involved with tau aggregation. Argyrophilic grains and ballooned neurons were also found in the medial temporal structures, however, extensions of the 4R-aggregations in the case were clearly broader than those of the argyrophilic grains. Western blot analysis of sarkosyl-insoluble fractions from brain lysates revealed prominent bands of tau at both 33 kDa and 37 kDa. Genetic examinations did not reveal any known pathogenic mutations in MAPT, DCTN-1, PSEN-1, or familial or young-onset parkinsonism-related genes. The clinical manifestations, pathologic findings, and biochemical properties of aggregated tau in our patient cannot be explained by argyrophilic grain disease or other known 4R-tauopathies alone. Our results further extend the clinical and neuropathologic spectra of 4R-tauopathy.
Keyphrases
- respiratory failure
- cerebrospinal fluid
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- early onset
- mechanical ventilation
- spinal cord
- parkinson disease
- weight loss
- multiple sclerosis
- drug induced
- single cell
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- case report
- type diabetes
- deep brain stimulation
- high resolution
- south africa
- gene expression
- white matter
- cerebral ischemia
- body mass index
- resting state
- dna methylation
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- density functional theory
- sleep quality
- functional connectivity
- middle aged
- insulin resistance
- locally advanced