The mitochondrial aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase proteins (mt-aaRSs) are a group of nuclear-encoded enzymes that facilitate conjugation of each of the 20 amino acids to its cognate tRNA molecule. Mitochondrial diseases are a large, clinically heterogeneous group of disorders with diverse etiologies, ages of onset, and involved organ systems. Diseases related to mt-aaRS mutations are associated with specific syndromes that affect the central nervous system and produce highly characteristic MRI patterns, prototypically the DARS2, EARS, and AARS2 leukodystrophies, which are caused by mutations in mitochondrial aspartyl-tRNA synthetase, mitochondria glutamate tRNA synthetase, and mitochondrial alanyl-tRNA synthetase, respectively.
Body
The disease patterns emerging for these leukodystrophies are distinct in terms of the age of onset, nature of disease progression, and predominance of involved white matter tracts. In DARS2 and EARS2 disorders, earlier disease onset is typically correlated with more significant brain abnormalities, rapid neurological decline, and greater disability. In AARS2 leukodystrophy cases reported thus far, there is nearly invariable progression to severe disability and atrophy of involved brain regions, often within a decade. Although most mutations are compound heterozygous inherited in an autosomal recessive fashion, homozygous variants are found in each disorder and demonstrate high phenotypic variability. Affected siblings manifest disease on a wide spectrum.
Conclusion
The syndromic nature and selective vulnerability of white matter tracts in these disorders suggests there may be a shared mechanism of mitochondrial dysfunction to target for study. There is evidence that the clinical variability and white matter tract specificity of each mt-aaRS leukodystrophy depend on both canonical and non-canonical effects of the mutations on the process of mitochondrial translation. Furthermore, different sensitivities to the mt-aaRS mutations have been observed based on cell type. Most mutations result in at least partial retention of mt-aaRS enzyme function with varied effects on the mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes. In EARS2 and AARS2 cells, this appears to result in cumulative impairment of respiration. Mt-aaRS mutations may also affect alternative biochemical pathways such as the integrated stress response, a homeostatic program in eukaryotic cells that typically confers cytoprotection, but can lead to cell death when abnormally activated in response to pathologic states. Systematic review of this group of disorders and further exploration of disease mechanisms in disease models and neural cells are warranted.
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Abkürzungen
Cho
Choline-containing compounds
ISR
Integrated stress response
ISRIB
ISR inhibitor
LBSL
Leukoencephalopathy with brainstem and spinal cord involvement and high lactate
LTBL
Leukoencephalopathy with thalamus and brainstem involvement and high lactate
Mi
Myoinositol
MRR
Mitochondrial respiratory rate
MRS
Magnetic resonance spectroscopy
mt-aaRSs
Mitochondrial aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase proteins
mtAspRS
Mitochondrial aspartyl-tRNA synthetase
NAA
N-acetyl acetate
OCR
Oxygen consumption rate
RCC
Respiratory chain complex
VWMD
Vanishing White Matter Disease
WARS2
Mitochondrial tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase
Background
Mitochondria are comprised of products encoded by two genomes, nuclear and mitochondrial, totaling roughly 1500 genes [1, 2]. Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase proteins (aaRSs) are a group of nuclear-encoded enzymes that ensure correct translation of the genetic code by conjugating each of the 20 amino acids to their cognate tRNA molecule [3‐5]. The cytosolic aaRS enzymes supply aminoacyl-tRNA conjugates for protein translation, and the corresponding mt-aaRSs are imported into the mitochondrial matrix to perform their canonical role of charging amino acids to their mitochondrial genome-encoded tRNA molecules (mt-tRNA) (Fig. 1). Diseases of mitochondria, the powerplants of the cell, are a large and clinically heterogeneous group of disorders, encompassing a wide diversity of etiologies, ages of onset, involved organ systems, and clinical presentations. Disorders caused by mt-aaRS mutations are generating particular interest among mitochondrial diseases due to their predilection for the central nervous system (CNS) damage [11, 12]. It is well known that mitochondrial dysfunction preferentially affects high-energy demand tissues, especially the brain, muscle, and heart. Remarkably, nearly all mt-aaRS mutations result in CNS pathologies, including encephalopathies, Perrault syndrome, and leukodystrophies [5] (Table 1). Three mutations result in rare, well-defined leukodystrophy syndromes, namely, DARS2, caused by mutations in mitochondrial aspartyl-tRNA synthetase; EARS2, caused by mutations in mitochondria glutamate tRNA synthetase; and AARS2, caused by mutations in mitochondrial alanyl-tRNA synthetase. Only three mt-aaRS mutations lead to pathology outside the CNS. A comprehensive, dynamic source has been developed for emerging information about the mt-aaRS enzymes called MiSynPat (mitochondrial aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases and pathologies). This is a continuously updating database and web server that collects existing and emerging data related to mutations affecting the human mt-aaRSs [5].
Table 1
Neurological disorders associated with mt-aaRS mutations
Leukodystrophy
DARS2
Leukoencephalopathy with brainstem and spinal cord involvement (LBSL)
EARS2
Leukoencephalopathy with thalamus and brainstem involvement and high lactate (LTBL)
AARS2
Ovario-leukodystrophy; rapid development of motor, cognitive, and psychiatric dysfunction
Table 1 lists a brief, categorized summary of the neurologic disease phenotypes caused by mt-aaRS mutations.
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As diseases associated with mt-aaRS enzymes are being further characterized, each appears to be associated with a very specific clinical syndrome. This phenomenon is best illustrated by the leukodystrophies caused by DARS2 (leukoencephalopathy with brainstem and spinal cord involvement and high lactate, LBSL), EARS2 (leukoencephalopathy with thalamus and brainstem involvement and high lactate, LTBL), and AARS2 mutations (ovario-leukoencephalopathy). Mutations in MARS2 are emerging as a fourth leukodystrophy, although only three cases have been reported thus far, in association with leukoencephalopathy, ataxia, and neurodevelopmental delays [13, 14].
The mt-aaRS disorders are inherited in an autosomal recessive fashion, and no de novo cases have been reported in the literature. The mechanisms underlying the specific genetic-clinical correlates are presently unknown. However, the clear syndromic nature of these disorders suggests there may be a shared mechanism that could be targeted for study. There is evidence that neuron-specific differences in the sensitivity to mutations may at least partially explain the selective vulnerability of specific white matter tracts in mt-aaRS leukodystrophies [15‐17]. Furthermore, the pathophysiology of the mt-aaRS disorders reflects inconsistent biochemical alterations in the mitochondrial pathway, resulting in at least partial retention of enzyme function (Fig. 1) [6, 18]. We propose that systematic review of these disorders will identify patterns and information of prognostic value that will be applicable to mt-aaRS-related disorders that are more recently emerging.
LBSL
Leukoencephalopathy with brainstem and spinal cord involvement and lactate elevation (LBSL) is typically characterized by slowly progressive gait difficulty secondary to spasticity, ataxia, and proprioceptive deficits with clear neuroimaging correlates in the pyramidal tracts, cerebellum, and dorsal columns [19, 20]. The hallmark diagnostic features are identification of a DARS2 mutation, which encodes mitochondrial aspartyl-tRNA synthetase, and a highly characteristic pattern of white matter changes on MRI. A lactate peak on proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) is often reported. LBSL presents as a clinical syndrome on a spectrum from mild to severe phenotypes [21, 22].
DARS2 encodes mitochondrial aspartyl-tRNA synthetase (mtAspRS), the enzyme that attaches aspartate to the correct mitochondrial tRNA. This step is a necessary prerequisite in the translation of mitochondrial mRNA into functional protein. The DARS2 mutation inheritance pattern is autosomal recessive, and strikingly, nearly all affected individuals have two compound heterozygous DARS2 mutations, one of which is in most cases a splice site mutation in intron 2, upstream of exon 3 [6, 19]. The consequence of this mutation type is that exon 3 is not included in the mRNA, leading to a frameshift, premature stop, and absence of functional protein. However, these splice site mutations are suspected to be “leaky,” so that for some proportion of the mRNA formed, exon 3 is appropriately included and a normal full-length protein is produced [15]. The disease is very rare, but there is an especially high-carrier rate of DARS2 mutations (1:95) in Finland, for reasons that have not yet been elucidated [23]. Over 60 different pathogenic DARS2 mutations have been reported to date, and accordingly, there is great heterogeneity in the combinations of mutations that are causal in LBSL [22, 24, 25]. Although most LBSL cases are due to compound heterozygous DARS2 mutations, a small subset of patients with homozygous DARS2 mutations have been reported [7, 26‐28].Thus, those carrying homozygous mutations do not necessarily die intrauterinely, but may present with a similar phenotype as patients carrying a compound heterozygous mutation.
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Regarding the selective vulnerability of nervous system tracts in LBSL, analysis of intron 2 splice site mutations showed that the correct inclusion of exon 3 in the normal aspartyl-tRNA synthetase (mtAspRS) mRNA occurs much less efficiently in neural cells relative to other cell types [29]. In an elegant transgenic mouse model in which DARS2 was depleted in either forebrain-hippocampal neurons or myelin-producing cells, it was shown that DARS2 depletion in adult neurons leads to a significant mitochondrial dysfunction and progressive neuronal apoptosis [30]. On the other hand, oligodendrocytes deficient in DARS2 were seemingly resistant to apoptosis despite dramatic respiratory chain deficiency, indicating that LBSL disease is predominantly due to neuronal pathology. Analysis of DARS2 missense mutations on the expression, enzyme activity, localization, and dimerization of mtAspRS revealed varying effects on this enzyme’s properties. Most missense mutations resulted in at least a small reduction of mitochondrial aspartylation activity within human cells [15, 29]; however, the alteration of mtAspRs activity was not clearly correlated with disease severity. The implication for treatment is that it will be challenging to develop a single, common therapy to target the varied effects that the missense mutations impose on mtAspRS activity. Therefore, the more efficient approach would be to trial interventions that increase correct splicing of exon 3.
Neuroimaging in LBSL
There is a very characteristic pattern of supratentorial, infratentorial, and spinal cord white matter involvement in LBSL, in particular, there is high T2 signal “demarcation” of the involved neuroanatomical pathways. The cerebral and cerebellar white matter, corticospinal tracts, superior and/or inferior cerebellar peduncles, medial lemniscus, pyramids, lateral corticospinal tracts, and dorsal columns are most frequently affected (Fig. 2, Table 4). Most patients also have an MRS finding of lactate elevation in the abnormal white matter [6, 19, 20, 32]. It is not fully understood if LBSL results from myelin loss or a disruption of myelin development. Only one post-mortem examination of the brain has been done in a severely affected LBSL infant patient and showed widespread loss of myelin in the cerebral and cerebellar white matter with reactive astrocytes and foamy macrophages. Gray matter structures were preserved except for the globus pallidus [33]. A growing body of neuroimaging evidence suggests the lesions reflect a predominant demyelination [34, 35]. First, a demyelinating process may explain the lack of gray matter lesions. Diffusion-weighted imaging in a case of two affected sisters showed uniformly increased lesional water diffusion, suggesting increased extracellular water levels secondary to myelin degeneration [35]. In a case report of an LBSL patient who underwent serial imaging, compared to the initial MRI, restricted diffusion appeared at the lesion edges, where there was a dark ADC map, although at the center of the lesion the ADC signal had increased, which also suggests demyelination [26]. Furthermore, serial imaging of three LBSL patients demonstrated progressive loss of white matter volume only [31]. In magnetic resonance spectroscopy studies, the frontal and cerebellar white matter shows elevated lactate (Lac), reduced N-acetyl acetate (NAA), increased myoinositol (mI), and mildly elevated choline-containing compounds (Cho). Decrease in NAA and increase in mI in MRS suggests axonal damage or loss and gliosis, while elevation of Cho suggests low-grade demyelination [34].
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There is evidence for an association of the MRI features and clinical phenotype, such that in late onset, mildly affected patients, the cerebral white matter abnormalities are less profound than in severely affected patients [22, 36‐38]. However, it is unclear if the location or severity of MRI lesions is predictive of disease progression [39, 40].
LBSL patterns of disease progression
The clinical severity in LBSL ranges from infantile onset, rapidly fatal disease to adult onset, slow and mild disease [22] (Table 2). However, the most common presentation of LBSL is slowly progressive deterioration of motor skills and in some cases cognitive skills beginning in childhood or adolescence [36]. In a longitudinal follow-up study of a large cohort of LBSL patients, the vast majority developed unsupported walking at an expected age. By adulthood, 50% required walking aids and 13% were wheelchair dependent. In general, earlier onset of symptoms predicted more severe neurological deterioration in the first decade after disease onset [22]. Case reports of affected siblings have shown that both mild and severe disease phenotypes can manifest even when the DARS2 mutations are identifical [41, 42].
Table 2
Natural history of mt-aaRS-related leukodystrophies
LBSL
LTBL
AARS2
Mean age at onset (age range)
8 years (5 months–40 years)
6 months (birth–16 months)
25 years (1.5–44 years)
Rate of disease progression
Slow, gradual >
rapid decline
Biphasic with stability or improvement after early “hit”
Rapid decline within a few years
Risk of disability
Greater disability associated with earlier age of onset
Greater disability associated with initial clinical and imaging severity
High risk of motor and cognitive impairment
Risk of mortality
Increased for infantile-onset disease, otherwise low
Increased for early onset, severe disease with multi-organ involvement
Increased risk from late disease complications
The overall disease prevalence and frequency of key clinical features in LBSL is reported in Table 3. The lower limbs are primarily affected in LBSL. Leg spasticity, ataxia, hyperreflexia, weakness, and atrophy of the leg muscles have been reported for the majority of LBSL patients. Fine motor skills are generally less severely affected than ambulation [22, 36, 43]. Impaired proprioception, sphincter dysfunction, and urge incontinence are often present. Seizures occur in some patients, which is consistent with an increased frequency of epilepsy for many mitochondrial disorders [44, 45]. More recently, involvement of the visual system has been reported, including optic atrophy, hypoacusis, and diplopia [46]. Furthermore, exercise-induced ataxia and fever [7] and motor deterioration after minor head trauma or after infection have been described [26].
Table 3
Clinical features of mt-aaRS-related leukodystrophies
LBSL (n = 128)
% of cases reported
LTBL (n = 21)
% of cases reported
AARS2 (n = 16)
% of cases reported
Sex (male)
45
62
56
Cognitive impairment or learning problems
30
100
94
Motor or gait impairment
94
100
88
Seizures
7
43
8
Psychiatric/behavior problems
Not reported
n/a
93
Incontinence
4
n/a
0
Sensory changes
67
Not reported
13
Ovarian failure (female)
0
n/a
100
Cardiac disease
0
0
6
Visual/auditory impairment
5
14
6
Table 3 lists the number of cases of each disorder reported in the literature and the prevalence of the clinical signs of disease as a percentage of these cases.
Most patients have normal cognitive ability, although a higher proportion than expected among the general population require special education and serious intellectual disability has occasionally been reported [8, 19, 22]. A longitudinal study of a series of LBSL patients who had neuropsychological testing in adulthood revealed a cognitive profile for each that was similar to that reported in patients with multiple sclerosis [47], namely impairment of information-processing speed and working memory.
Few medications have been trialed to prevent LBSL disease progression or promote recovery from a metabolic crisis. Diplopia appeared to be steroid-responsive in a patient with adult-onset LBSL [46]. Exercise-induced paroxysmal gait ataxia and areflexia showed a dose-dependent sustained treatment response to a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor [7]. The drug cantharidin, a protein phosphatase 1 and 2A inhibitor and splicing modulator, has been shown to affect intron 2/exon 3 event splicing, which is the most common mutation in LBSL [22, 48]. Cantharidin itself is too toxic for human use, but less toxic variants and alternative protein phosphatase 1 or 2A inhibitors are under investigation [9, 49, 50].
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LTBL
A detailed clinical and imaging review of leukoencephalopathy with thalamus and brainstem involvement and high lactate (LTBL) cases reveals both a mild and severe disease phenotype caused by either heterozygous or homozygous EARS2 mutations, which encode mitochondrial glutamyl-tRNA synthetase [18, 51]. All patients typically experience infantile onset, rapidly progressive disease with severe MRI abnormalities and increased lactate in serum and proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Whereas mildly affected patients partially recover and make developmental progress over the next few years with associated MRI improvement and declining lactate levels, severely affected patients experience a stagnant clinical course, associated with MRI brain atrophy and persistently high lactate (Figs. 3 and 4).
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In a study of biochemical assays of individual mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes (RCC) in cultured fibroblasts of LTBL patients, there was a spectrum of moderate reduction of RCC activity to virtually undetectable activity in some complexes (Fig. 1) [18, 31]. Thus, the authors proposed that the decreased cellular oxygen consumption rate and inversely increased lactate production is likely the effect of cumulative impairment of respiration by the whole set of mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes. Assays have not yet been performed in LTBL neuronal cells, which would permit insight into the effects of specific mutations on overall mt-aaRS activity in these especially vulnerable cells.
LTBL neuroimaging
MRI pattern recognition paired with whole-exome sequencing first defined LTBL, which features extensive symmetrical cerebral white matter abnormalities sparing the periventricular rim and symmetrical signal abnormalities of the consistently affected corpus callosum, basal ganglia, thalami, midbrain, pons, medulla, and cerebellar white matter [10, 16, 18, 51] (Table 4). Some patients also exhibit dysplasia and/or agenesis or thinning of the posterior corpus callosum, and the cerebral white matter is initially more diffusely abnormal-appearing and edematous. Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy shows increased lactate in affected brain regions. The lesional pathology in LTBL remains unclear, although imaging studies mostly support a process of delayed myelination. An early infantile case showed mildly elevated T2 and T1 signal in the subcortical white matter, indicating lack of myelin deposition. In subsequent studies, the T2 hyperintensity faded, indicating myelin deposition was occurring, albeit at a delayed timepoint [18]. Moreover, reports of cases with the absence of the thalami or parts of the corpus callosum support the theory that damage occurs to these structures antenatally, causing disruption of further development [52].
Table 4
Radiologic features of mt-aaRS-related leukodystrophies
LBSL (n = 128)
% of cases reported
LTBL (n = 21)
% of cases reported
AARS2 (n = 16)
% of cases reported
Imaging pattern
Asymmetric
0
0
87
Symmetric
100
100
13
Distribution of T2/FLAIR signal abnormalities
Cortical WM
100 (frontal, parietal or diffuse predominance)
100 (predominantly diffuse)
100 (fronto-parietal predominance)
Periventricular WM
100
9 (periventricular rim usually spared)
87
Subcortical WM
100
61
7 (rare subcortical U-fiber involvement)
Corpus callosum
79
95
100
Pyramidal tracts
99
14
81
Brainstem
100 (medullary tract predominance)
95
63
Cerebellum
97
83
27
Basal ganglia
8 (caudate or putamen)
62 (caudate, putamen, or globus pallidus)
39 (caudate)
Thalamus
0
100
Not reported
Lesion characteristics
Diffusion restriction of any tract
82
38
87
Atrophy
3 (adult patients)
27
77
Elevated lactate on MR spectroscopy
83
71
20
Table 4 lists the prevalence of radiologic signs of disease based on percentage of cases reported in the literature.
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LTBL disease progression
In the mild LTBL variant, associated with either EARS2 heterozgous or homozygous mutations, initially, there is a developmental delay, hypotonia, and poor feeding in infancy. Most patients experience early milestone regression prior to onset of clear, rapid neurological deterioration marked by spasticity and ataxia [10, 16, 18] (Tables 2 and 3). This phase is followed by partial recovery of lost motor and cognitive skills. The majority of patients have some residual spasticity perhaps requiring walking aids. Cognitive ability ranges from average to mild impairment [10, 16, 53]. As the clinical status improves, the MRI abnormalities also partially resolve.
A subset of LTBL patients experience onset of neurological impairment in the neonatal period, characterized by global failure to attain milestones, severe axial hypotonia, dysphagia, and often progression to spastic tetraparesis [18, 51, 52, 54]. There may be development of seizures. Although their symptoms stabilize over time, there is no clear recovery of neurologic function. Neuroimaging demonstrates more significant radiographic abnormalities, such as atrophy of the brain, brainstem or cerebellum, and corpus callosum dysgenesis, with associated high lactate on MRS. This severe phenotype has been associated with both homozygous and heterozygous EARS2 mutations. The progression of LTBL has also been characterized by early, rapid neurological deterioration, severe lactic acidosis, and multi-systems disease, which may lead to fatal cardiorespiratory failure [55, 56]. In the acute resuscitation phase, a standard treatment regimen for mitochondrial disorders has been administered, including thiamine, riboflavin, and coenzyme Q 10, but no long-term interventions have been developed.
AARS2-related leukoencephalopathy
AARS2 leukoencephalopathy is attributed to a defect in mitochondrial alanyl-tRNA synthetase, only compound heterozygous mutations have been reported [57‐59]. The classic presentation of AARS2 (ovario) leukoencephalopathy is a childhood-to-adulthood onset of neurologic deterioration with features of ataxia, spasticity, cognitive decline, and later in the disease course, frontal lobe impairment that manifests as psychiatric disorders or executive dysfunction. All affected female patients develop ovarian failure.
AARS2 neuroimaging
The MRI typically shows a leukoencephalopathy with a significant involvement of left-right connections, descending tracts, and cerebellar atrophy [57, 60, 61]. MRI signal abnormalities are primarily found in frontal and parietal white matter, deep white matter, and the corpus callosum (Table 4, Fig. 5). Neuroimaging suggests that the pathology underlying white matter signal abnormalities is demyelination, although post-mortem tissue has not been studied. MR spectroscopy and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), reported only in one patient thus far, reflected the presence of active demyelination with an elevated lactate peak, high choline-containing compounds, and lesional DWI/ADC maps indicative of restricted diffusion [60]. Furthermore, the presence of spots of restricted diffusion in the cerebral white matter has a similar appearance to LBSL lesions and is ascribed to myelin vacuolization, which is commonly seen in mitochondrial leukodystrophies [57].
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AARS2 leukoencephalopathy disease progression
The onset of symptoms usually occurs in the 3rd or 4th decade of life, starting with cognitive decline, mood, or behavioral problems then the development of signs consistent with frontal lobe dysfunction, such as stereotypies and apraxia, and motor impairment [57, 61] (Table 2). For affected women, ovarian failure is typically the first sign of disease. Spasticity is the most consistent finding and dystonia, dysarthria, or tremor may also be present. When the cerebellum is involved, ataxia or nystagmus appear. There may be rapidly progressive motor impairment with no evidence of cognitive regression or cognitive deterioration without motor dysfunction. Typically, within 5–10 years, these patients advance to the point of no or limited interaction with the environment, non-ambulatory status, and in many cases, premature death [58, 59, 62].
A smaller group of patients have exhibited motor or cognitive delays as early as infancy or childhood. In these cases, despite impaired balance, clumsiness, or learning difficulties, their clinical course remained stable until the teenage years, at which time rapid progression of motor, cognitive, and psychiatric impairment began [57]. One recent case presented with onset of bilateral optic atrophy and retinopathy in late infancy [63]. In addition to supratentorial and cerebellar multifocal white matter changes, there were signal changes in the dorsal columns of the spinal cord, a novel finding in this disease. The exam was notable for absent patellar reflexes and normal strength and sensation, but electromyogram revealed a motor demyelinating polyneuropathy.
Although it was previously thought that AARS2 also causes an isolated, infantile onset cardiomyopathy without brain involvement, and one case has been reported with brain imaging signal abnormalities and atrophy as well as cardiomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and early death [64‐67]. Therefore, investigation of the brain in infant patients who present with cardiomyopathy is worthwhile. The reported prevalence of key features of AARS2-leukodystrophy is listed in Table 3. No treatments for AARS2 leukoencephalopathy have been systematically studied.
Discussion
The disease patterns that are emerging for different mt-aaRS mutations, even in small cohorts of patients are quite distinct (Tables 2 and 3). The LBSL natural history generally features slowly progressive motor and cognitive deterioration after onset in childhood. The LTBL disease course is biphasic, involving one “hit” in the neonatal or infantile period with either stability or recovery based on the degree of MRI brain insult. AARS2 leukoencephalopathy is characterized by relatively late onset of significant disease with rapid progression to motor and cognitive disability. Despite these differences, some common themes are present. Homozygous variants are present in each of these disorders and may manifest a disease phenotype anywhere along the spectrum. Siblings with the same set of mutations may be quite variably affected. Early onset of symptoms is often associated with more widespread or significant structural brain abnormalities. Accordingly, significant brain abnormalities are more often associated with faster neurological deterioration and ultimately greater disability. On the other hand, clinical recovery, if it occurs, is often paralleled by improvement in restricted diffusion, T2/FLAIR hyperintensity, and MRS lactate peak on serial imaging. Systemic involvement, especially in younger onset cases, is common and has important implications for morbidity and mortality.
It is not known what factors contribute to early and late onset forms of these disorders, but as previously noted, earlier disease onset is often correlated with more severe brain abnormalities that appear to have occurred early in development. Thus far, the rarity of the mt-aaRS diseases and high number of private mutations has precluded the establishment genotype-phenotype associations. Available evidence in a cohort of 66 LBSL patients suggests that the genotype influences the phenotype; in particular, some combinations of mutations were consistently associated with a mild phenotype, but larger numbers of patients are needed to confirm this [22]. One theory is that some combinations of the two compound heterozygous mutations may lead to a more profound loss of mt-aaRS enzyme activity than others, leading to greater mitochondrial respiratory chain complex dysfunction. Given that carriers are asymptomatic and many affected patients have symptoms that do not affect their survival or mobility until after young adulthood, it is plausible that compound heterozygous mutations are the primary inheritance mode.
As illustrated in Fig. 1, decreased EARS2 and AARS2 enzyme activity in cultured cells leads to decreased function of specific mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes, presumably because of misfolding of RCC proteins. Furthermore, in LTBL, there are measured decreases in the cellular oxygen consumption rate. Therefore, the leading theory is that the increased lactate production is secondary to these cumulative defects in mitochondrial respiration. Indeed, the finding of lactate elevation is not required for diagnosis of any of these disorders, and although the majority of patients exhibit elevated lactate on MRS, the levels appear to fluctuate over time. Furthermore, lactate elevation is known to be a non-specific marker of mitochondrial disease [68].
Beyond their canonical function of directly altering tRNA charging, thereby facilitating the translation of proteins that form the mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes (Fig. 1), it is also possible that the mt-aaRS affect non-canonical biochemical pathways in neurons, such as those involved in cell signalling, transcription, or rRNA biogenesis [69, 70]. In humans, two sets of distinct nuclear genes code for either the cytosolic aaRSs or the mitochondrial aaRSs [71]. Cytosolic aaRSs have roles in numerous non-canonical cellular functions beyond translation, such as angiogenesis, immune responses, inflammation, tumorigenesis, and neuronal development [72, 73]. Similarly, reports of non-canonical roles for the mt-aaRS are beginning to emerge, such as a pro-angiogenic function for rat mitochondrial tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase (WARS2) [74] and a possible role for mt-aaRS mutations in the integrated stress response (ISR) [75]. The ISR is a highly conserved homeostatic program in eukaryotic cells that is activated in response to a diversity of pathologic states or cellular stresses. Agnew et al. postulated that activation of the ISR through alternative mechanisms is dependent on the degree of mitochondrial translation inhibition [75]. Complete inhibition of mitochondrial translation in DARS2 knockout mice results in the accumulation of unassembled nuclear-encoded respiratory chain subunits, causing severe proteostatic stress and UPRmt-dependent ISR activation [76]. In this model, there is failure of the ISR to achieve homeostasis, resulting in severe cardiac disease and decreased survival. However, partial inhibition of mitochondrial translation in a WARS2 mouse model leads to ISR activation due to respiratory chain dysfunction and loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, resulting in a more mild cardiac phenotype and increased survival [75].
Further evidence that malfunction of the mitochondrial translational machinery promotes pathologic ISR activation in white matter disease comes from the study of disease mechanisms in Vanishing White Matter Disease (VWMD). VWMD is a severe progressive leukodystrophy with episodic clinical deterioration due to mutations in the five genes that encode the subunits of the elongation initiation factor complex EIF2B [77‐80]. EIF2B is a key regulator of mRNA translation [81, 82]. Interestingly, EIF2B is also a regulator of the ISR and abnormal ISR response is thought to be the main underlying pathomechanism in VWMD [83‐85]. Many EIF2B mutations in VWMD have no clear effect on the enzyme’s activity or complex formation [86‐88]. However, some VWMD mutations destabilize the decameric eIF2B holoenzyme and impair its enzymatic activity. In a mouse VWMD model, an ISR inhibitor (ISRIB) blocked ISR activation, stabilized VWMD mutant eIF2B in the decameric form, and restored normal catalytic activity [89]. Similar to the mt-aaRS disorders, it is unclear why VWMD selectively affects the white matter [90]. Recent investigations have shown that VWMD astrocytes appear toxic to neurons and oligodendrocytes and show impaired maturation [91, 92]. Mutation of EIF2B in VWMD mutant mice resulted in ISR upregulation in both astrocytes and oligodendrocytes that preceded myelin loss and motor deficits [93]. Such mechanistic studies have not yet been attempted in the mt-aaRS leukodystrophies.
Conclusion
The significant clinical variability and tissue specificity found within each mt-aaRS disorder highlight the importance of understanding the factors influencing mitochondrial translation in different cell types. Overall, the effects of mt-aaRS mutations on the process of translation may be subtle and difficult to dissociate, especially given the high number of private mutations. Furthermore, there is a growing rationale to explore potential non-canonical roles of the mt-aaRSs in immune regulation, inflammation, and neuronal differentiation. Mechanistic studies are challenging, especially since it appears that some of the mutation effects are specific to a neuronal or glial context, and obtaining patient cells that can be cultured for this purpose is cost and labor intensive.
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Competing interests
Regarding interests to declare, Dr. Fatemi is a paid drug safety monitoring board member for Bluebird Bio, Stealth Biotherapeutics, and paid consultant to Calico Labs. All other authors declare that they have no competing interests.
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