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MRI Reveals Brain Development Differences in Children with Fragile X

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 09 Jun 2010
Fragile X syndrome is the most common known cause of autism and inherited intellectual disability. Now, researchers using sophisticated, noninvasive imaging techniques have demonstrated how the brains of very young boys with fragile X syndrome differ from those of young boys without it, providing vital information for the development of treatments for the condition.

In a longitudinal study published online May 3, 2010, in the journal Proceedings of the [U.S.] National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), researchers from the Stanford University School of Medicine and collaborators from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill (UNC; NC, USA) tracked anatomic changes that, over time, progressively differentiate the brains of children with fragile X syndrome from those of children without it.

Image: Image: Light micrograph an X chromosome (purple) with fragile X syndrome, a genetic cause of mental retardation (Photo courtesy of CMSP).
Image: Image: Light micrograph an X chromosome (purple) with fragile X syndrome, a genetic cause of mental retardation (Photo courtesy of CMSP).

Triggered by a mutation in a gene located on the X chromosome, fragile X syndrome affects about one in every 4,000 people, with more significant symptoms occurring in males than females. This disorder's genetics and neurobiology are relatively well understood, hastening the pace with which potential drug therapies have been moving through the pharmaceutical pipeline, said the study's senior author, Allan Reiss, M.D., a Stanford professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and professor of radiology.

Dr. Reiss, who directs the Center for Interdisciplinary Brain Sciences Research at Stanford, has been studying fragile X syndrome for more than 20 years. "A number of years ago, we saw new treatments quickly coming down the line,” he said. "So we wanted to provide information that could be used to guide those treatments.” Application of these new findings might enable scientists and clinicians to tell if a therapy is working in the very youngest of children diagnosed with this condition.

Fragile X syndrome alone accounts for approximately 2% - 3% of all cases of autism, making it the most common known, specific genetic risk factor for that disorder, although not all people with fragile X syndrome develop autism. Autism is increasingly viewed as not a single disease but a spectrum of them. A large number of diverse genes have been identified as contributing to autism, but with each responsible for only a sliver of cases. Fragile X syndrome patients often manifest discomfort with eye contact, hypersensitivity to sound or touch, abnormalities of language and movement, and varying levels of developmental delay.

In the study, the Stanford and UNC investigators used high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to obtain detailed images of one- to three-year-old boys' brains, and followed-up two years later with a second imaging session. The MRI findings were analyzed at Stanford, chiefly by Dr. Reiss and the study's lead authors: Fumiko Hoeft, M.D., Ph.D., an imaging expert, and instructor at the Center for Interdisciplinary Brain Sciences Research (CIBSR), and medical student John Carter. MR brain images from 41 fragile X syndrome boys were compared with those from age- and developmentally-matched control subjects: 21 boys who were developing typically, and 7 others who were experiencing nonfragile-X-related developmental delay.

Whereas many features of brain anatomy were similar from one group to the next, the fragile X brains evidenced at an early age (that is, during their first imaging session at one to three years of age) an overabundance of gray matter in such regions as the caudate and thalamus, and a diminished presence in a part of the cerebellum called the vermis. This suggests that the fragile X syndrome mutation had already begun to cause identifiable, consistent changes in brain development, perhaps even before birth. However, the basal forebrain as well as a different part of the thalamus and many areas of the cerebral cortex of fragile X patients, while interchangeable from those of control subjects during the first imaging session, diverged from their counterparts two years later. These findings suggest that specific downstream effects of the mutation become evident only later in brain development.

Knowing the locations of fragile X syndrome brain-structure abnormalities and the developmental time course over which they occur--and being able to noninvasively detect those changes in young patients--will make it possible to monitor new therapies' effectiveness in (it is hoped) restoring patients' brain structure and function to normality.

Related Links:

Stanford University School of Medicine
University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill



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