Mediators of Inflammation (Jan 2014)

Subclinical Inflammatory Status in Rett Syndrome

  • Alessio Cortelazzo,
  • Claudio De Felice,
  • Roberto Guerranti,
  • Cinzia Signorini,
  • Silvia Leoncini,
  • Alessandra Pecorelli,
  • Gloria Zollo,
  • Claudia Landi,
  • Giuseppe Valacchi,
  • Lucia Ciccoli,
  • Luca Bini,
  • Joussef Hayek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/480980
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2014

Abstract

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Inflammation has been advocated as a possible common central mechanism for developmental cognitive impairment. Rett syndrome (RTT) is a devastating neurodevelopmental disorder, mainly caused by de novo loss-of-function mutations in the gene encoding MeCP2. Here, we investigated plasma acute phase response (APR) in stage II (i.e., “pseudo-autistic”) RTT patients by routine haematology/clinical chemistry and proteomic 2-DE/MALDI-TOF analyses as a function of four major MECP2 gene mutation types (R306C, T158M, R168X, and large deletions). Elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate values (median 33.0 mm/h versus 8.0 mm/h, P<0.0001) were detectable in RTT, whereas C-reactive protein levels were unchanged (P=0.63). The 2-DE analysis identified significant changes for a total of 17 proteins, the majority of which were categorized as APR proteins, either positive (n=6 spots) or negative (n=9 spots), and to a lesser extent as proteins involved in the immune system (n=2 spots), with some proteins having overlapping functions on metabolism (n=7 spots). The number of protein changes was proportional to the severity of the mutation. Our findings reveal for the first time the presence of a subclinical chronic inflammatory status related to the “pseudo-autistic” phase of RTT, which is related to the severity carried by the MECP2 gene mutation.