Juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis or Batten disease (JNCL) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by blindness, seizures, cognitive decline and early death. Brain atrophy and retinitis pi Show more
Juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis or Batten disease (JNCL) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by blindness, seizures, cognitive decline and early death. Brain atrophy and retinitis pigmentosa ensue because of neuronal and photoreceptor apoptosis. The CLN3 gene defective in JNCL encodes a novel 438 amino acid protein. Most affected genes harbor a deletion resulting in a truncated protein. CLN3 overexpression in NT2 cells enhances growth, reverses growth inhibition induced by serum starvation and protects from apoptosis induced by vincristine, staurosporine, and etoposide but not from death caused by ceramide. CLN3 modulates endogenous and vincristine-activated ceramide, and therefore suppresses apoptosis by impacting generation of ceramide. Show less
The late infantile and juvenile variants of Batten disease are genetically distinct neurodegenerative disorders. Hallmarks of Batten disease include cognitive and motor decline, seizures and blindness Show more
The late infantile and juvenile variants of Batten disease are genetically distinct neurodegenerative disorders. Hallmarks of Batten disease include cognitive and motor decline, seizures and blindness due to retinitis pigmentosa. Recently, the CLN3 gene responsible for the juvenile variant has been cloned. Also, apoptosis was proven to be the mechanism by which neurons and photoreceptors die. This paper provides mechanistic support for the occurrence of apoptosis in this disease: There was marked upregulation of Bcl-2 in brain from the late infantile and juvenile types at the protein and RNA levels both by immunocytochemistry and by Northern blot analysis; there were also a 42% to 197% increase in brain ceramide determinations in brains from three patients with the juvenile type and three patients with the late infantile type. Double immunolabeling of brain sections for apoptosis and Bcl-2 supported a protective role for Bcl-2 in the juvenile form of Batten disease. These results raise the possibility that the intact CLN3 gene is normally antiapoptotic, and that it could be an upstream regulator of ceramide. Show less