

Author: Schlüter Agatha Espinosa Lluís Fourcade Stéphane Galino Jorge López Eva Ilieva Ekaterina Morató Laia Asheuer Muriel Cook Ted McLaren Alistair Reid Juliet Kelly Fiona Bates Stewart Aubourg Patrick Galea Elena Pujol Aurora
Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISSN: 1460-2083
Source: Human Molecular Genetics, Vol.21, Iss.5, 2012-03, pp. : 1062-1077
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Abstract
X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD) is an inherited disorder characterized by axonopathy and demyelination in the central nervous system and adrenal insufficiency. Main X-ALD phenotypes are: (i) an adult adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN) with axonopathy in spinal cords, (ii) cerebral AMN with brain demyelination (cAMN) and (iii) a childhood variant, cALD, characterized by severe cerebral demyelination. Loss of function of the ABCD1 peroxisomal fatty acid transporter and subsequent accumulation of very-long-chain fatty acids (VLCFAs) are the common culprits to all forms of X-ALD, an aberrant microglial activation accounts for the cerebral forms, whereas inflammation allegedly plays no role in AMN. How VLCFA accumulation leads to neurodegeneration and what factors account for the dissimilar clinical outcomes and prognosis of X-ALD variants remain elusive. To gain insights into these questions, we undertook a transcriptomic approach followed by a functional-enrichment analysis in spinal cords of the animal model of AMN, the
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