3.8 Review

Adult-onset type II citrullinemia: Current insights and therapy'

Journal

APPLICATION OF CLINICAL GENETICS
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages 163-170

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/TACG.S162084

Keywords

citrin deficiency; CTLN2; neonatal-onset type II citrullinemia; NICCD; hyperammonemia; medium-chain triglyceride

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Citrin deficiency is a recessively inherited metabolic disorder with age-dependent clinical manifestations. It causes neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis (NICCD) and adult-onset type II citrullinemia (CTLN2). Patients with NICCD present with intrahepatic cholestasis in the neonatal period and usually respond to the treatment with medium-chain triglyceride (MCT) supplement and lactose-restricted formula. In adulthood, CTLN2 develops in <10 % of the patients showing hyperammonemic encephalopathy. Patients with CTLN2 required liver transplantation for the most promising prognosis; however, they were successfully treated with MCT supplement with a low carbohydrate formula. Citrin deficiency is caused by mutations in SLC25A13 on chromosome 7q21.3, with a high frequency in East Asia, including Japan. Citrin is aspartate/glutamate transporter in mitochondria, a component of malate-aspartate nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide hydrogen shuttle, and is essential for the hepatic glycolysis. Although the precise pathophysiology of citrin deficiency remains unclear, recent reports for the effective MCT supplement therapy and downregulation of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha suggest that citrin deficiency impairs hepatic de novo lipogenesis coupled with glycolysis leading to the energy deficit of hepatocytes. Herein, we review the current therapeutic and pathological understanding of CTLN2.

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