Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is a sleep disorder which primarily involves loss of muscle atonia during REM sleep, leading to dream enactment behaviour (i.e. patients move in response to the content of their dreams).Reference Gagnon, Postuma, Mazza, Doyon and Montplaisir 1 Although RBD is not life threatening, recent studies indicate that it is a well-established risk factor for neurodegenerative disease.Reference Postuma, Gagnon and Montplaisir 2 Indeed, studies from sleep centres revealed that 40-65% of patients with idiopathic RBD will develop a neurodegenerative disease over a period of 10 years. In the large majority of cases this will be a synucleinopathy (Parkinson’s disease (PD), Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB) or Multiple System Atrophy (MSA)).Reference Postuma, Gagnon and Montplaisir 3 A recent case report also described an individual diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia (FTD) three years after he started to complain of sleep disturbance that polysomnography examinations revealed to be RBD.Reference Lo Coco, Cupidi, Mattaliano, Baiamonte, Realmuto and Cannizzaro 4
Recently, a non-coding hexanucleotide repeat expansion in the C9orf72 gene has been identified as the most common genetic cause of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS) and FTD.Reference DeJesus-Hernandez, Mackenzie and Boeve 5 , Reference Renton, Majounie and Waite 6 A recent study estimated that 37.6% of FALS patients and 25.1% of familial FTD patients carry the C9orf72 expansion, respectively.Reference Majounie, Renton and Mok 7 The pathogenic expansion was found to be non-penetrant in individuals younger than 35 years, 50% penetrant by 58 years, and almost fully penetrant by 80 years. However, large expansions (>400 repeats) were recently found in 0.15% of controls from the United Kingdom, suggesting that the penetrance may be incomplete on a population scale.Reference Beck, Poulter and Hensman 8 Given the presence of common pathological features between ALS, FTD and other neurodegenerative diseases, such as ubiquitinated TDP-43 positive inclusion bodies in the central nervous system,Reference Neumann, Sampathu and Kwong 9 , Reference Nakashima-Yasuda, Uryu and Robinson 10 the C9orf72 repeat expansion has since been tested in a panel of neurodegenerative diseases which revealed a wide phenotypic spectrum in the expansion carriers.Reference Le Ber, Camuzat and Guillot-Noel 11 - Reference Xi, Zinman and Grinberg 15
Taken together and, given the clinical and pathological link between ALS/FTD and PD and the link between RBD and PD, we conducted a genetic screen of the C9orf72 hexanucleotide repeat expansion in a cohort of RBD patients to investigate its potential role in the pathogenesis of RBD.
Methods
A total of 344 patients with RBD were enrolled in this study. Clinical characteristics of these patients are summarised in Table 1. Rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder patients were recruited through an international consortium. All cases were seen by a neurologist specialized in sleep disorders and diagnosed with definite RBD according to the International Classification of Sleep Disorder criteria (ICSD-2). Written informed consent was given by all participants and the study was approved by the ethics and review boards of the participating institutions. The analysis of the C9orf72 hexanucleotide repeat expansion was performed by repeat-primed polymerase chain reaction (RP-PCR) and complemented by a fluorescent fragment length analysis as previously described.Reference DeJesus-Hernandez, Mackenzie and Boeve 5 Alleles with more than 30 repeats were considered to be expanded.
The average and range (minimum-maximum) is given for age at symptoms onset and age at diagnosis.
Results
Genetic screening of our cohort of 344 RBD patients revealed two carriers of the C9orf72 hexanucleotide repeat expansion (Figure 1). Fluorescent fragment length analysis of the C9orf72 repeat region in these two patients further confirmed the amplification of one non-expanded allele in each of them (Figure 1). Moreover, 24 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) defining the C9orf72 associated-risk haplotypeReference Mok, Traynor and Schymick 16 and observed in 9p21-linked ALS and FTD pedigrees were genotyped in these two patients and revealed the same disease risk haplotype observed in several populations (data not shown).
The first patient is a 65 year old man with no family history of RBD or neurodegenerative diseases. He developed symptoms of idiopathic PD at the age of 45, with excellent response to dopaminergic therapy. He eventually had successful deep brain stimulation for levodopa fluctuations. He developed symptoms of RBD at the age of 58, which was confirmed on polysomnography at age 60. He has no signs of cognitive impairment and is currently being treated with ropinirole. The second patient is a 69 year old man who developed symptoms of RBD at the age of 65. This was confirmed on polysomnogram three years later. He has subsequently been documented to have hyposmia (a predictor of synuclein-mediated neurodegeneration in RBD.Reference Postuma, Gagnon, Vendette, Desjardins and Montplaisir 17 He had noted subjective cognitive impairment but formal neuropychological testing, including frontal executive function, was normal. Magnetic Resonance Imaging was normal. He later developed symptoms of bradykinesia without clear rigidity or rest tremor. Response to trials of piribedil and levodopa was equivocal.
Discussion
In this study, we performed a genetic analysis of the C9orf72 hexanucleotide repeat expansion in a cohort of patients with RBD recruited through an international consortium including many of the leading RBD research groups across the world. Two patients with definite RBD were found to carry the repeat expansion. Moreover, analysis of 24 SNPs corresponding to the C9orf72 associated-risk haplotype revealed the same common haplotype observed in several populations, further suggesting that this mutation derived from a single ancestor.
The diagnosis of PD was made in one case and the second eventually developed equivocal signs of parkinsonism, with a clear diagnosis not yet established. Although there are reports of RBD occurring in a broad array of neurological conditions,Reference Gagnon, Postuma, Mazza, Doyon and Montplaisir 1 RBD is considered to be a very strong sign of a synuclein-mediated neurodegenerative process. A very recent autopsy study concluded that 80 of 82 neurodegenerative disease patients with polysomnogram (PSG)-proven RBD had synuclein deposition on autopsy. In the total cohort of 172 patients (i.e. including non-PSG confirmed cases), none had a primary diagnosis of frontotemporal dementia and none had deposition of TDP-43.Reference Boeve, Silber and Ferman 18 Among our two patients, one had very strong clinical evidence of synucleinopathy (particularly with levodopa fluctuations and positive response to deep brain stimulation), whereas the second patient's clinical diagnosis had not yet become clear (although the hyposmia and equivocal parkinsonism provided additional evidence for neurodegenerative synucleinopathy). Therefore, our study suggests that C9orf72 mutations can occur in clinical synucleinopathies, including RBD. Recent studies of the C9orf72 expansions in cohorts of PD patients across several populations revealed no major role in PD pathogenesis.Reference Daoud, Noreau and Rochefort 19 - Reference Majounie, Abramzon, Renton, Keller, Traynor and Singleton 21 In addition, evidence is sparse for the contribution of C9orf72 expansions in DLB although this expansion was recently identified in 2 out of 102 patients who fulfilled the criteria for probable DLB (although diagnosis was not confirmed pathologically).Reference Snowden, Rollinson and Lafon 22
Since both patients in this study are Caucasians and both had developed symptoms of neurodegenerative disease, one question arises from this observation: can the C9orf72 repeat expansion be considered as pathologically linked to RBD or it is in fact an underlying genetic cause of the more severe neurodegenerative subgroup of patients? The simplest way to answer this question would be to analyze a larger cohort of patients, including those who have had longstanding RBD without progression to other neurodegenerative diseases. Such a comparison will allow direct assessments of the role of C9orf72 mutations in prediction of outcome. Moreover, the C9orf72 expansion appears to be much more frequent in Caucasian ALS patients (37.6% in FALS) compared to the Japanese ALS population (3.4% in FALS).Reference Konno, Shiga and Tsujino 23 Consequently, the combination of Japanese and Caucasian RBD patients in this study could have led to an underestimation of the C9orf72 expansion frequency in the Caucasian subjects or its overestimation in the Japanese subjects.
We cannot exclude that the co-occurrence of PD or DLB with RBD in the same patient could be coincidental but, given the low prevalence of these conditions in the general population and the fact that RBD is strongly linked to synucleinopathies, a causal relationship between these conditions is supported.
The examination of a genetic defect originally linked to ALS and FTD in a cohort of RBD cases, a disease strongly linked to synucleinopathy, suggests common pathways involved in several neurodegenerative disorders.Reference Shulman and De Jager 24 Interestingly, a recent study showed an association between RBD and familial ALS in two siblings with a p.L84F missense mutation in the SOD1 gene.Reference Ebben, Shahbazi, Lange and Krieger 25
In summary, we report here two patients with a clinical diagnosis of RBD carrying the C9orf72 repeat expansion. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of a potential genetic risk factor for RBD. Despite their novelty, our results have to be interpreted with caution and will need to be independently replicated by other groups to firmly confirm a causative role of the C9orf72 repeat expansion in the pathogenesis of RBD.
Acknowledgements and Funding
The authors thank the patients for their participation in this study. This work was financially supported by the Parkinson Society of Canada. The RBD research program (Gagnon, Montplaisir and Postuma) at the Hôpital du Sacré-Cœur de Montréal is supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) and the Fonds de recherche du Québec – Santé (FRQS). The French DNA collection of RBD patients was coordinated by Isabelle Arnulf (project PARAGEN) and promoted by ADOREPS. HD is supported by a postdoctoral fellowship from the ALS Society of Canada and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). GAR holds a Canada Research Chair in Genetics of the Nervous System and the Jeanne et J-Louis-Lévesque in Genetics of Brain Diseases.