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KPV

Lys-Pro-Val, α-MSH (11-13)

Quick Stats
Studies 104
Trials 57
Score 1
2017 pubmed 45 citations

Neonatal detection of Aicardi Goutières Syndrome by increased C26:0 lysophosphatidylcholine and interferon signature on newborn screening blood spots.

Armangue. Thais T; Orsini. Joseph J JJ; Takanohashi. Asako A; Gavazzi. Francesco F; Conant. Alex A; Ulrick. Nicole N; Morrissey. Mark A MA; Nahhas. Norah N; Helman. Guy G; Gordish-Dressman. Heather H; Orcesi. Simona S; Tonduti. Davide D; Stutterd. Chloe C; van Haren. Keith K; Toro. Camilo C; Iglesias. Alejandro D AD; van der Knaap. Marjo S MS; Goldbach Mansky. Raphaela R; Moser. Anne B AB; Jones. Richard O RO; Vanderver. Adeline A

Key Findings

  • About 68% of AGS newborns had elevated C26:0 Lyso‑PC levels that would trigger a second‑tier X‑ALD screen
  • 73.7% of AGS cases showed an increased interferon gene signature in newborn blood spots
  • All AGS babies with a negative interferon signature had RNASEH2B mutations, and the interferon signal was consistent between newborn and later samples

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers this study isn’t directly actionable, but it highlights that certain metabolic markers used in newborn screening can pick up unrelated inflammatory conditions, so be cautious interpreting false‑positive results. It also suggests early interferon activity can be detected before symptoms, which may inform future early‑intervention strategies for rare diseases.

Summary

Researchers found that babies with a rare genetic disease called Aicardi‑Goutières syndrome (AGS) often show higher levels of a lipid marker (C26:0 Lyso‑PC) and an interferon‑related gene signature in newborn blood spots, which could cause them to be flagged as positive in newborn tests meant for a different disease (X‑linked adrenoleukodystrophy).

Abstract

Aicardi Goutières Syndrome (AGS) is a heritable interferonopathy associated with systemic autoinflammation causing interferon (IFN) elevation, central nervous system calcifications, leukodystrophy and severe neurologic sequelae. An infant with TREX1 mutations was recently found to have abnormal C26:0 lysophosphatidylcholine (C26:0 Lyso-PC) in a newborn screening platform for X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy, prompting analysis of this analyte in retrospectively collected samples from individuals affected by AGS. In this study, we explored C26:0 Lyso-PC levels and IFN signatures in newborn blood spots and post-natal blood samples in 19 children with a molecular and clinical diagnosis of AGS and in the blood spots of 22 healthy newborns. We used Nanostring nCounter™ for IFN-induced gene analysis and a high-performance liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC MS/MS) newborn screening platform for C26:0 Lyso-PC analysis. Newborn screening cards from patients across six AGS associated genes were collected, with a median disease presentation of 2months. Thirteen out of 19 (68%) children with AGS had elevations of first tier C26:0 Lyso-PC (>0.4μM), that would have resulted in a second screen being performed in a two tier screening system for X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD). The median (95%CI) of first tier C26:0 Lyso-PC values in AGS individuals (0.43μM [0.37-0.48]) was higher than that seen in controls (0.21μM [0.21-0.21]), but lower than X-ALD individuals (0.72μM [0.59-0.84])(p<0.001). Fourteen of 19 children had elevated expression of IFN signaling on blood cards relative to controls (Sensitivity 73.7%, 95%CI 51-88%, Specificity 95%, 95% CI 78-99%) including an individual with delayed disease presentation (36months of age). All five AGS patients with negative IFN signature at birth had RNASEH2B mutations. Consistency of agreement between IFN signature in neonatal and post-natal samples was high (0.85). This suggests that inflammatory markers in AGS can be identified in the newborn period, before symptom onset. Additionally, since C26:0 Lyso-PC screening is currently used in X-ALD newborn screening panels, clinicians should be alert to the fact that AGS infants may present as false positives during X-ALD screening.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2017

Date

2017-07-20T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.ymgme.2017.07.006

Citations

45

References

30