Skip to content
Preprint · OA via OpenAlex

Succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency: Lessons from mice and men

Phillip L. Pearl, K. Michael Gibson, Miguel A. Cortez, Yingli Wu, O. Carter Snead, Ina Knerr, K. Forester, Jordyn Pettiford, C. Jakobs, William H. Theodore

Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease · 2009 · ▲ 114 citations

Abstract

Succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase (SSADH) deficiency, a disorder of GABA degradation with subsequent elevations in brain GABA and GHB, is a neurometabolic disorder with intellectual disability, epilepsy, hypotonia, ataxia, sleep disorders, and psychiatric disturbances. Neuroimaging reveals increased T2-weighted MRI signal usually affecting the globus pallidus, cerebellar dentate nucleus, and subthalamic nucleus, and often cerebral and cerebellar atrophy. EEG abnormalities are usually generalized spike-wave, consistent with a predilection for generalized epilepsy. The murine phenotype is characterized by failure-to-thrive, progressive ataxia, and a transition from generalized absence to tonic-clonic to ultimately fatal convulsive status epilepticus. Binding and electrophysiological studies demonstrate use-dependent downregulation of GABA(A) and (B) receptors in the mutant mouse. Translational human studies similarly reveal downregulation of GABAergic activity in patients, utilizing flumazenil-PET and transcranial magnetic stimulation for GABA(A) and (B) activity, respectively. Sleep studies reveal decreased stage REM with prolonged REM latencies and diminished percentage of stage REM. An ad libitum ketogenic diet was reported as effective in the mouse model, with unclear applicability to the human condition. Acute application of SGS-742, a GABA(B) antagonist, leads to improvement in epileptiform activity on electrocorticography. Promising mouse data using compounds available for clinical use, including taurine and SGS-742, form the framework for human trials.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1007/s10545-009-1034-y
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-23 MST

Cite this

APA
Pearl, P.L., Gibson, K.M., Cortez, M.A., Wu, Y., Snead, O.C., Knerr, I., Forester, K., Pettiford, J., Jakobs, C., &amp; Theodore, W.H. (2009). Succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency: Lessons from mice and men. <em>Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease</em>. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10545-009-1034-y
Vancouver
Pearl PL, Gibson KM, Cortez MA, Wu Y, Snead OC, Knerr I, et al. Succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency: Lessons from mice and men. Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease. 2009. doi:10.1007/s10545-009-1034-y.
BibTeX
@unpublished{phillip2009Succin, title = {Succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency: Lessons from mice and men}, author = {Phillip L. Pearl and K. Michael Gibson and Miguel A. Cortez and Yingli Wu and O. Carter Snead and Ina Knerr and K. Forester and Jordyn Pettiford and C. Jakobs and William H. Theodore}, journal = {Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease}, year = {2009}, doi = {10.1007/s10545-009-1034-y}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings