Infantile refsum disease (IRD) is an inherited disorder characterized by the reduction or absence of cellular peroxisomes and by the accumulation of various unmetabolized substances in the blood and bodily tissues. The disorder arises in infancy and results in visual and hearing impairments, decreased muscle tone, poor growth, mental retardation, decreased coordination, liver damage, and abnormal development of facial structures. There is no cure for the disorder, and treatment is limited to the relief of symptoms.
Living bodies are built up of millions of individual cells specifically adapted to carry out particular functions. Within cells are even smaller structures, called organelles, which perform different jobs and enable the cell to serve its ultimate purpose. One type of organelle is the peroxisome, whose function is to break down waste materials or to process materials that, if allowed to accumulate, would prove toxic to the cells.
Peroxisomes break down various materials through the use of enzymes (proteins that assist in biochemical reactions), and 80 different peroxisomal enzymes have been identified. These enzymes are made by the cell and transported into the peroxisome by a complex process, requiring at least 15 other proteins. In some cases, an absence or deficiency of these proteins results in a failure to transport enzymes into peroxisomes, leaving the cell unable to metabolize various substances. These substances build up in the blood stream and deposit in various tissues, causing damage.
Infantile refsum disease (IRD) results from an abnormality in the transport of enzymes into the peroxisome, manifesting as absent or reduced functioning peroxisomes. As a consequence of peroxisome deficiency, various substances accumulate in the bloodstream, including phytanic acid, pipecolic acid, hydroxycholestanoic acids, glyoxylate, and substances called very-long-chain fatty acids (VLCFA). Mutations in at least two different genes that encode proteins that participate in the transport of enzymes to the peroxisome have been identified in IRD.
IRD is thought to be the mildest form of leukodystrophy, a group of genetic disorders including Zellweger syndrome and neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy, that damage the fatty sheaths surrounding nerves. In the past, IRD was thought to be a variant of adult refsum disease (also called classical refsum disease) because both
IRD is a genetic condition and is inherited or passed on in a family. The genetic abnormality for the disorder is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait, meaning that two mutant genes are needed to display the disease. A person who carries one mutant gene does not display the disease and is called a carrier. A carrier has a 50% chance of transmitting the gene to their children. A child must inherit the same abnormal gene from each parent to display the disease.
IRD is caused by an abnormality in proteins that assist in the transport of enzymes into the peroxisome. Mutations in the genes for at least two different peroxisomal transport proteins have been identified. The first gene is designated PEX1 (mapped to human chromosome 7, locus 7q21-q22) and encodes for a protein called peroxisome biogenesis factor-1. The second gene is designated PEX2 (mapped to human chromosome 8, locus 8q21.1) and encodes for a protein called peroxisomal membrane protein-3.
The combined incidence of all leukodystrophy disorders is estimated to be between 1 in 25,000 and 1 in 50,000. It is unclear whether these disorders are distributed equally among different geographical areas and ethnic groups. Because of some overlap with other leukodystrophy disorders, the incidence and prevalence of IRD in the general population is not clear.
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Author Info: Oren Traub MD, PhD, Thomson Gale, Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Genetic Disorders Part II, 2005 |