This study is a national, non-randomized, open-label, multi-site with minimal risk study in adult with adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN), childhood and adult subjects with cerebral ALD (cALD), juvenile/adult metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD) and adults with leukoencephalopathy and axonal spheroids and pigmented glia (ALSP). 49 subjects will be enrolled with one blood sample collection during one of their medical follow-up visit. This trial will evaluate the role of innate immunity to influence disease progression in X-ALD, MLD and ALSP, and if the mutations related to these leukodystrophies result in a specific immune response leading to the pathogenesis.
X-linked Adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD), Metachromatic Leukodystrophy (MLD) and Adult-onset leukoencephalopathy with axonal spheroids and pigmented glia (ALSP) are among the most frequent inherited leukodystrophies. X-ALD and MLD can affect both children and adults, while it is thought that ALSP onset exclusively during adulthood. These three diseases are characterized by phenotypic variability and poor genotype-phenotype correlation. In childhood forms of MLD and childhood cerebral ALD (C-CALD) a devastating cerebral demyelination and neuronal degeneration lead to a rapid neurologic degradation and premature death. Patients with the adult form of X-ALD (adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN), 60% of males) display a progressive spastic paraplegia without brain involvement. However, 20% of AMN patients will also develop cerebral ALD. Patients diagnosed with the juvenile/adult (JA-) MLD form are affected by a progressive decline of their cognitive function, followed later by that of the motor abilities. ALSP patients present a rapidly progressive neurodegenerative disorder that impairs behavioural, cognitive and motor functions. Several arguments support the contribution of the immune response and neuroinflammation in these three leukodystrophies. In X-ALD, activation of microglia (macrophages of the CNS) plays an essential role in the acute demyelination phase, where a severe inflammatory process occurs. In ALSP, the dysfunctional protein (CSF1R) is almost exclusively expressed in microglia. Even if MLD is not considered as a neuroinflammatory disease per se, microglia activation and increased inflammatory cytokines are observed in the brain of MLD patients and mice. Even if the most commonly accepted hypothesis is that neuroinflammation is caused by secondary activation of microglia following phagocytosis of myelin debris full of undegraded material, a primitive role of the inflammation due to macrophages (MAC) dysfunction has emerged in recent years. MATRIX proposes to explore how disease-related mutations affect key components of MAC activation responses and how it reflects on their functionality.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
100
blood sample collection
AP-HP Hôpital Bicêtre
Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France
RECRUITINGAP-HP Hôpital La Pitié Salpêtrière
Paris, France
RECRUITINGMacrophages functionality - distribution of monocytes
distribution of monocytes in the CD14-/+/++ and CD16-/+ classification using flow cytometry (% of CD14++/16-; CD14++/16+; CD14+/16+; CD14-/16-)
Time frame: 2 years after blood collection
Macrophages functionality - myelin phagocytosis capacity
percentage of myelin high, myelin low and myelin negative cells using flow cytometry
Time frame: 2 years after blood collection
Macrophages functionality - HLA levels
maximum fluorescence intensity for HLA markers using flow cytometry
Time frame: 2 years after blood collection
Macrophages metabolic profiling
Macrophages metabolic profiling (\>2000 metabolites) using liquid chromatography coupled to high resolution mass spectrometry
Time frame: 2 years after blood collection
Macrophages transcriptomic profiling
Macrophages transcriptomic profiling (\>1200 coding and non coding genes) : RNA sequencing using NextSeq 500 Illumina (60 million single-end, 150 base reads ) and analysis (using FastQC, Picard-Tools, Samtools and rseqc softwares
Time frame: 2 years after blood collection
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