McLeod neuroacanthocytosis syndrome (MLS) is a multisystem disorder with central nervous system (CNS), neuromuscular, cardiovascular, and hematologic manifestations in males. Heterozygous females have mosaicism for the Kell and Kx blood group antigens but usually lack CNS and neuromuscular manifestations; however, some heterozygous females may develop clinical manifestations including chorea or late-onset cognitive decline.
Affected Males
CNS manifestations of MLS resemble Huntington disease. Symptoms comprise the prototypic triad of a progressive neurodegenerative basal ganglia disease including movement disorder, cognitive alterations, and psychiatric symptoms [Danek et al 2001a, Jung et al 2007]. It should be noted that each sign and symptom may develop in isolation or in variable combinations.
Choreiform movements are the presenting manifestation in about 30% of individuals with MLS, and develop in up to 95% of individuals over time [Danek et al 2001b, Jung et al 2001a, Hewer et al 2007]. Some individuals with MLS develop head drop, feeding dystonia, and gait abnormalities – manifestations formerly believed to be specific to another type of neuroacanthocytosis, the autosomal recessive chorea-acanthocytosis [Chauveau et al 2011, Gantenbein et al 2011].
Cognitive alterations are not a major presenting feature of MLS; however, frontal-type cognitive deficits are eventually found in at least 50% of individuals during the course of the disease [Danek et al 2001a, Jung et al 2001a, Danek et al 2004, Hewer et al 2007].
About 20% of individuals initially manifest psychiatric abnormalities including personality disorder, anxiety, depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, bipolar disorder, or schizo-affective disorder. Psychopathology develops in about 80% of individuals over time [Danek et al 2001a, Jung et al 2001a, Jung & Haker 2004, Walterfang et al 2011].
Seizures are the presenting manifestation in about 20% of individuals. Up to 40% of individuals with MLS eventually have seizures, usually described as generalized.
Neuromuscular manifestations are not a common presenting manifestation of MLS. However, almost all individuals with MLS have absent deep tendon reflexes as an indication of a (mostly subclinical) sensorimotor axonopathy [Danek et al 2001a, Jung et al 2001a]. About 50% of individuals develop clinically relevant muscle weakness or atrophy of a predominantly neurogenic nature but also myopathic during the disease course. Deterioration rate is slow, and few individuals develop severe weakness [Kawakami et al 1999, Danek et al 2001a, Jung et al 2001a, Hewer et al 2007].
Obstructive sleep apnea, mentioned in a number of individuals with MLS, must be better characterized to qualify as a disease feature [Danek et al 2001a, Weaver et al 2019].
Cardiac manifestations including dilated cardiomyopathy, atrial fibrillation, and tachyarrhythmia are rarely presenting signs and symptoms of MLS. About 60% of individuals develop cardiac manifestations over time [Witt et al 1992, Danek et al 2001a, Oechslin et al 2009, Quick et al 2021].
In a cardiac MRI study confirming the potentially malignant nature of cardiac involvement in MLS, four of five individuals with MLS had a dilated left ventricle, two of four a dilated right ventricle, and three of five a reduced left ventricular ejection fraction. Two of four individuals with MLS experienced ventricular tachycardia; Troponin T and CK values were elevated in all individuals for whom data were available [Quick et al 2021].
In seven males with MLS, one presented with a cardiomyopathy and died from sudden cardiac death in the absence of any cardiovascular risk factors. Autopsy demonstrated eccentric hypertrophy and mild left ventricular dilatation. Histopathology was not specific and revealed focal myocyte hypertrophy, slight variation of myofiber size, and patchy interstitial fibrosis [Witt et al 1992, Oechslin et al 2009]. Comparable histologic findings were observed in the heart of the only individual with MLS who has undergone cardiac transplantation [Laurencin et al 2018].
Hepatosplenomegaly, most probably resulting from compensated hemolysis, occurs in about one third of males with MLS [Danek et al 2001a].
McLeod blood group phenotype. About 30% of males with the McLeod blood group phenotype did not have neuromuscular or CNS findings at the time of initial diagnosis of the blood group abnormalities and were only recognized during routine workup in blood banks or in the course of family evaluations [Danek et al 2001a, Jung et al 2001a, Jung et al 2007]. However, most males with the McLeod blood group phenotype developed neurologic manifestations during long-term follow up [Danek et al 2001a, Hewer et al 2007].
The hematologic manifestations are red blood cell acanthocytosis and compensated hemolysis. Alloantibodies in the Kell and Kx blood group system can cause strong reactions to transfusions of incompatible blood and severe anemia in newborns of Kell-negative mothers.
Natural history. The age of onset of neurologic manifestations ranges from 18 to 61 years; the majority of individuals become symptomatic before age 40 years. Almost all clinical observations indicate a slowly progressive disease course [Danek et al 2001a, Jung et al 2001a, Valko et al 2010]. Because of difficulty in determining the exact onset of disease, few reliable data regarding disease duration are available. Activities of daily living may become impaired as a result of the movement disorder, psychiatric manifestations, intellectual disability, and/or cardiomyopathy.
The interval between reported disease onset and death ranges from seven to 51 years; the mean age of death is 53 years (range: age 31-69 years) [Danek et al 2001a, Jung et al 2001a, Hewer et al 2007, Walker et al 2019]. Mean disease duration from diagnosis to death was 21 years [Walker et al 2019]. Cardiac problems, in particular tachyarrhythmia, appear to be a major cause of premature death in MLS; other causes of death include pneumonia, seizure, suicide, and sepsis [Walker et al 2019].
Other Studies
Serum concentrations of LDH, AST, and ALT may also be elevated [Danek et al 2001a, Jung et al 2001a]. These elevated values reflect muscle cell pathology and should not be misinterpreted as hepatic pathology.
Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS).
1H-MRS demonstrates pathologic NAA/(Cr+Cho) ratios in frontal, temporal, and insular areas with an individual pattern in males with MLS who have predominant psychiatric or neuropsychological manifestations [Dydak et al 2006].
MRI volumetry. Basal ganglia volumes are inversely correlated with disease duration [Jung et al 2001a]. A follow-up study of three individuals with MLS over seven years using an automated subcortical segmentation procedure demonstrated decreasing caudate volumes [Valko et al 2010].
Nuclear medicine. SPECT studies using 123I-IMP and 123I-IBZM revealed reduction of striatal perfusion and striatal D2-receptor density, respectively, in some males with MLS [Danek et al 1994, Oechsner et al 2001].
[18F]-FDG (2-fluoro-2-deoxy-glucose) PET revealed bilaterally reduced striatal glucose uptake in all symptomatic individuals with MLS [Jung et al 2001a, Oechsner et al 2001]. Quantitative FDG-PET also demonstrated reduced striatal glucose uptake in asymptomatic males with the McLeod blood group phenotype and in female heterozygotes [Jung et al 2001a, Oechsner et al 2001]. The degree of reduction of striatal glucose uptake also correlated with disease duration [Jung et al 2001a].
Muscle biopsy has shown myopathic as well as neurogenic alterations, which were predominant in most studies:
Several studies demonstrated fiber type grouping, type 1 fiber predominance, type 2 fiber atrophy, increased variability in fiber size, and increased central nucleation [
Swash et al 1983,
Jung et al 2001b].
In a series of ten individuals with MLS, including the original index patient, all had abnormal muscle histology: four had clear but nonspecific myopathic changes; however, all had neurogenic changes of variable degree consistent with predominant neurogenic muscle atrophy [
Hewer et al 2007].
One individual with an
XK pathogenic missense variant had normal histologic and immunohistochemical findings [
Jung et al 2003].
In muscle of healthy individuals, Kell antigen was located in the sarcoplasmic membranes and Kx immunohistochemistry revealed type 2 fiber-specific intracellular staining most probably confined to the sarcoplasmic reticulum, supporting the finding that XK forms a complex with VPS13A (see
Molecular Pathogenesis). Muscle in males with MLS revealed no expression of Kx or Kell [
Jung et al 2001b].
Nerve histology
Nerve biopsy may demonstrate a chronic axonal neuropathy with prominent regenerative activity and selective loss of large myelinated fibers [
Dotti et al 2004].
Postmortem motor and sensory nerve examinations demonstrated axonal motor neuropathy [
Hewer et al 2007].
Brain pathology. Data from four individuals with MLS (3 males and 1 manifesting female heterozygote) are available [Hardie et al 1991, Danek et al 2008, Geser et al 2008]:
In the manifesting female heterozygote, marked striatal atrophy was noted, corresponding to nonspecific loss of nerve cells and reactive astrocytic gliosis with predominant alterations in the head of the caudate nucleus [
Hardie et al 1991].
In two males similar alterations were found with severe atrophy of the striatum and (less pronounced) of the globus pallidus [
Danek et al 2008,
Geser et al 2008]. Marked neuronal loss and astrocytic gliosis were observed on histologic examination. Moderate focal subcortical and subtle cortical astrocytic gliosis, particularly in frontal areas, was noted.
In contrast to
chorea-acanthocytosis, none of the four individuals with MLS demonstrated pathology in the thalamus or substantia nigra. Neither Lewy bodies nor definite abnormalities in other brain areas (e.g., the cortex) were observed.