Evidence for effect of l-serine, a novel therapy for GRIN2B-related neurodevelopmental disorder
Author
Other authors
Publication date
2023ISSN
1096-7206
Abstract
Rationale: To date, causal therapy is potentially available for GRIN2B-related neurodevelopmental disorder
(NDD) due to loss-of-function (LoF) variants in GRIN2B, resulting in dysfunction of the GluN2B subunitcontaining
N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR). Recently, in vitro experiments showed that high doses of
NMDAR co-agonist D-serine has the potential to boost the activity in GluN2B LoF variant-containingNMDARs. Initial
reports of GRIN2B-NDD patients LoF variants, treated with L-serine using different regimens, showed varying
effects onmotor and cognitive performance, communication, behavior and EEG. Here, this novel treatment using
a standardized protocolwith an innovative developmental outcomemeasure is explored further in an open-label
observational GRIN2B-NDD study.
Methods: Initially, in vitro studies were conducted in order to functionally stratify two de novo GRIN2B variants
present in two female patients (18 months and 4 years old). Functional studies showed that both variants are
LoF, and thus the patients were treated experimentally according to an approved protocol with oral L-serine
(500 mg/kg/day in 4 doses) for a period of 12months. Both patients showed a heterogeneous clinical phenotype,
however overlapping symptoms were present: intellectual developmental disability (IDD), behavioral abnormalities
and hypotonia. Outcome measures included laboratory tests, quality of life, sleep, irritability, stool,
and performance skills, measured by, among others, the Perceive-Recall-Plan-Perform System of Task Analysis
(PRPP-Assessment).
Results: Both patients tolerated L-serinewithout adverse effects. In one patient, improvement in psychomotor development
and cognitive functioning was observed after 12 months (PRPPmastery score 10% at baseline, 78% at
twelvemonths). In the most severe clinically affected patient no significant objective improvement in validated
outcomeswas observed. Caregivers of both patients reported subjective increase of alertness and improved communication
skills.
Conclusion: Our observational study confirms that L-serine supplementation is safe in patients with GRIN2B-NDD
associated with LoF variants, and may accelerate psychomotor development and ameliorate cognitive performance
in some but not all patients. The PRPP-Assessment, a promising instrument to evaluate everyday activities and enhance personalized and value-based care, was not performed in the severely affected patient, meaning
that possible positive results may have been missed. To generate stronger evidence for effect of L-serine in
GRIN2B-NDD, we will perform placebo-controlled n-of-1 trials.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
575 - General genetics. General cytogenetics
Pages
10 p.
Publisher
Elsevier
Is part of
Molecular Genetics and Metabolism, 138, 107523
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This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Articles [1581]
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

