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1.
Mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) VI is a lysosomal storage disease caused by a deficiency of N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfatase, also called arylsulfatase B (ARSB, EC 3.1.6.12). Dogs with MPS VI show progressive predominantly oculoskeletal signs homologous to those in human and feline patients. We report herein two pathogenic ARSB gene variants in Miniature Pinscher and Miniature Schnauzer dogs with MPS VI and a genotyping survey in these breeds. All exons and adjacent regions of the ARSB gene were sequenced from three affected Miniature Pinschers and three affected Miniature Schnauzers. Allelic discrimination assays were used for genotyping. A missense variant (NM_001048133.1:c.910G>A) was found in exon 5 of MPS VI-affected Miniature Pinschers that is predicted to result in a deleterious amino acid substitution of a highly conserved glycine to arginine (NP_001041598.1:p.Gly304Arg). In MPS VI-affected Miniature Schnauzers, a 56 bp deletion (NM_001048133.1:c.-24_32del) was found at the junction of exon 1 and its upstream region, predicting no enzyme synthesis. All clinically affected Miniature Pinschers and Miniature Schnauzers were homozygous for the respective variants, and screened healthy dogs in each breed were either heterozygous or homozygous for the wt allele. Whereas the Miniature Pinscher variant seemed to occur commonly (0.133 allele frequency), the Miniature Schnauzer variant was presumed to be rare. In conclusion, two breed-specific pathogenic ARSB gene variants were identified in Miniature Pinscher and Miniature Schnauzer dogs with MPS VI, allowing for genotyping and informed breeding to prevent the production of affected offspring.  相似文献   

2.
Mucopolysaccharidosis type VI (MPS VI) is an autosomal recessive lysosomal disorder caused by a mutation in the ARSB gene, which encodes arylsulfatase B (ARSB), and is characterized by glycosaminoglycan accumulation. Some pathogenic mutations have been identified in or near the substrate-binding pocket of ARSB, whereas many missense mutations present far from the substrate-binding pocket. Each MPS VI patient shows different severity of clinical symptoms. To understand the relationship between mutation patterns and the severity of MPS VI clinical symptoms, mutations located far from the substrate-binding pocket must be investigated using mutation knock-in mice. Here, I generated a knock-in mouse model of human ARSB Y85H mutation identified in Japanese MPS VI patients using a CRISPR-Cas9-mediated approach. The generated mouse model exhibited phenotypes similar to those of MPS VI patients, including facial features, mucopolysaccharide accumulation, and smaller body size, suggesting that this mouse will be a valuable model for understanding MPS VI pathology.  相似文献   

3.
cDNAs encoding the human lysosomal hydrolase, arylsulfatase B (ASB; N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfatase, EC 3.1.6.1), were isolated from a hepatoma cell cDNA library using an ASB-specific oligonucleotide generated by the MOPAC (mixed oligonucleotide primed amplification of cDNA) technique. To facilitate cDNA cloning, human ASB was purified to apparent homogeneity and a total of 112 amino acid residues were microsequenced from the N-terminus and four internal tryptic peptides of the 47-kDa subunit. Based on the ASB N-terminal amino acid sequence, two oligonucleotide mixtures containing inosines to reduce the mixture complexity were constructed and used as primers to amplify an ASB-specific product from human placental cDNA by the polymerase chain reaction. DNA sequencing of this MOPAC product demonstrated colinearity with 21 N-terminal ASB amino acids. Based on this sequence and on codon usage for the adjacent conserved amino acids in human arylsulfatases A and C, a unique 66-mer was synthesized and used to screen a human hepatoma cell cDNA library. Four putative positive cDNA clones were isolated, and the largest insert (pASB-1) was sequenced in both orientations. The 1834-bp pASB-1 insert had a 1278-bp open reading frame encoding 425 amino acids that was colinear with 85 microsequenced amino acids of the purified enzyme, demonstrating its authenticity. Using the pASB-1 cDNA as a probe, a full-length cDNA clone, pASB-4, was isolated from a human testes library and sequenced in both orientations. pASB-4 had a 2811-bp insert containing a 559-bp 5' untranslated sequence, a 1602-bp open reading frame encoding 533 amino acids (six potential N-glycosylation sites), a 641-bp 3' untranslated sequence, and a 9-bp poly(A) tract. Comparison of the predicted amino acid sequences of arylsulfatases A, B, and C revealed regions of identity, particularly in their N-termini.  相似文献   

4.
In a feline model of mucopolysaccharidosis type VI (MPS VI), recombinant feline N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfatase (rf4S) administered at a dose of 1 mg/kg of body weight, altered the clinical course of the disease in two affected cats treated from birth. After 170 days of therapy, both cats were physically indistinguishable from normal cats with the exception of mild corneal clouding. Feline N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfatase was effective in reducing urinary glycosaminoglycan levels and lysosomal storage in all cell types examined except for corneal keratocytes and cartilage chondrocytes. In addition, skeletal pathology was nearly normalized as assessed by radiographic evidence and bone morphometric analysis. Comparison of results with a previous study in which recombinant human 4S (rh4S) was used at an equivalent dose and one 5 times higher indicated that rf4S had a more pronounced effect on reducing pathology than the same dose of rh4S, and in some instances such as bone pathology and lysosomal storage in aorta smooth muscle cells, it was as good as, or better than, the higher dose of rh4S. We conclude that in the feline MPS VI model the use of native or same species enzyme for enzyme replacement therapy has significant benefits.  相似文献   

5.
A 2112-bp cDNA clone (lambda CT29) encoding the entire sequence of the human lysosomal acid phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.2) was isolated from a lambda gt11 human placenta cDNA library. The cDNA hybridized with a 2.3-kb mRNA from human liver and HL-60 promyelocytes. The gene for lysosomal acid phosphatase was localized to human chromosome 11. The cDNA includes a 12-bp 5' non-coding region, an open reading frame of 1269 bp and an 831-bp 3' non-coding region with a putative polyadenylation signal 25 bp upstream of a 3' poly(A) tract. The deduced amino acid sequence reveals a putative signal sequence of 30 amino acids followed by a sequence of 393 amino acids that contains eight potential glycosylation sites and a hydrophobic region, which could function as a transmembrane domain. A 60% homology between the known 23 N-terminal amino acid residues of human prostatic acid phosphatase and the N-terminal sequence of lysosomal acid phosphatase suggests an evolutionary link between these two phosphatases. Insertion of the cDNA into the expression vector pSVL yielded a construct that encoded enzymatically active acid phosphatase in transfected monkey COS cells.  相似文献   

6.
The enzyme arylsulfatase B (N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfatase; ARSB; ASB) removes 4-sulfate groups from the sulfated glycosaminoglycans (sGAG) chondroitin-4-sulfate (C4S) and dermatan sulfate (DS). Inborn deficiency of ARSB leads to the lysosomal storage disease mucopolysaccharidosis VI, characterized by accumulation of sGAG in vital organs, disruption of normal physiological processes, severe morbidity, and premature death. Recent published work demonstrated extra-lysosomal localization with nuclear and cell membrane ARSB observed in bronchial and colonic epithelial cells, cerebrovascular cells, and hepatic cells. In this report, the authors present ARSB immunostaining in a colonic microarray and show differences in distribution, intensity, and pattern of ARSB staining among normal colon, adenomas, and adenocarcinomas. Distinctive, intense luminal membrane staining was present in the normal epithelial cells but reduced in the malignancies and less in the grade 3 than in the grade 1 adenocarcinomas. In the normal cores, a distinctive pattern of intense cytoplasmic positivity at the luminal surface was followed by reduced staining deeper in the crypts. ARSB enzymatic activity was significantly greater in normal than in malignant tissue. These study findings affirm extra-lysosomal localization of ARSB and suggest that altered ARSB immunostaining and reduced activity may be useful indicators of malignant transformation in human colonic tissue.  相似文献   

7.
Mucopolysaccharidosis type VI, or Maroteaux-Lamy syndrome, is an autosomal recessive disease caused by the deficiency of arylsulfatase B (ARSB; N-acetyl-galactosamine-4-sulfatase, E.C.3.1.6.12), which is involved in the stepwise degradation of dermatan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate. The deficiency of this enzyme causes storage in the lysozomes and excretion in the urine of partially degraded dermatan sulfate. Twenty patients with MPSVI were analyzed, including 2 siblings. Genomic DNA from patients was extracted and amplified by PCR followed by analysis by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP), which detects altered patterns in the single-stranded DNA. Amongst the patients analyzed for exon 8 of the ARSB gene, 5 patients presented an altered band pattern when compared to controls. After sequencing, we have detected a 23-bp deletion, extending from nucleotides 1,533 to 1,555, causing a frameshift and changing 2 amino acids before creating a premature stop codon at amino acid 514.  相似文献   

8.

Background

Mucopolysaccharidosis VI (MPS VI), due to recessively inherited 4‐sulfatase (4S) deficiency, results in lysosomal storage of dermatan sulfate in numerous tissues. Retinal involvement is limited to the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). This study aimed to determine whether recombinant adeno‐associated virus (AAV)‐mediated delivery of 4S would reverse the RPE pathology seen in MPS VI cats.

Methods

AAV.f4S, containing the feline 4S cDNA, was delivered unilaterally to eyes of affected cats by subretinal or intravitreal injection. Contralateral eyes received AAV with the green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter gene as control. At 2–11 months post‐injection, the cats were sacrificed and the treatment effects were evaluated histologically.

Results

By ophthalmoscopy and histological analyses, GFP was evident as early as 4 weeks and persisted through the latest time point (11 months). Untreated and AAV.GFP‐treated diseased retinas contained massively hypertrophied RPE cells secondary to accumulation of dilated lysosomal inclusions containing dermatan sulfate. MPS VI eyes treated subretinally with AAV.f4S had minimal RPE cell inclusions and, consequently, were not hypertrophied.

Conclusions

AAV‐mediated subretinal delivery of f4S provided correction of the disease phenotype in RPE cells of feline MPS VI, supporting the utility of AAV as a vector for the treatment of RPE‐specific as well as lysosomal storage diseases. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
  相似文献   

9.
10.
Summary A deficiency of N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulphatase (G4S, gene symbol ARSB), results in the accumulation of undegraded substrate and the lysosomal storage disorder, Maroteaux-Lamy syndrome (mucopolysaccharidosis type VI). In situ hybridization using an 3H-labelled human G4S genomic DNA fragment to human metaphase chromosomes localized ARSB to chromosome 5q13–5q14. This location is consistent with, an refines, previous chromosomal assignments based on the expression of human G4S in somatic cell hybrids.  相似文献   

11.
12.
13.
Hepatic arylsulfatase B (ASB) from normal and mucopolysaccharidosis VI (MPS VI) cats was purified over 2,800- and 1,800-fold, respectively, and their physical and kinetic properties were characterized. In contrast to the normal feline enzyme, the partially purified MPS VI residual activity had a 100-fold greater Km value and was markedly less stable to thermal, cryo-, and pH-inactivation. In addition, the MPS VI enzyme had a more negative charge as determined by its migration on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and its elution profile on cation exchange chromatography. Finally, the MPS VI activity had approximately half the apparent molecular weight of the normal feline enzyme, which was a homodimer, suggesting that the genetic mutation in feline MPS VI altered the subunit association as well as the kinetic and stability properties of the mutant protein.  相似文献   

14.
Mucopolysaccharidosis type VI (MPS VI; Maroteaux-Lamy disease) results from the deficient activity of the lysosomal enzyme, arylsulfatase B (ASB; N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfatase E.C.3.1.6.1). The enzymatic defect leads to the accumulation of the glycosaminoglycan, dermatan sulfate, primarily in connective tissue and reticuloendothelial cell lysosomes. Although MPS VI patients have normal intelligence and no neurologic abnormalities, the disease is clinically heterogeneous: severely affected individuals expire in childhood or early adolescence while those with the mild or intermediate phenotypes have a slower, milder disease course and a longer life span. The recent isolation of the full-length cDNA-encoding human ASB permitted an investigation of the molecular lesions underlying the phenotypic heterogeneity in MPS VI. The ASB cDNA-coding sequences were determined from two unrelated MPS VI patients with the severe (proband 1) and mild (proband 2) phenotypes. These patients had about 2% and 7% of normal ASB activity in cultured fibroblasts, respectively. Proband 1 was homoallelic for a T-to-C transition in nucleotide (nt) 349, which predicted a cysteine-to-arginine substitution in the ASB polypeptide at residue 117 (C117R). Proband 2 was heteroallelic, having a T-to-C transition in nt 707, which predicted a leucine-to-proline replacement at ASB residue 236 (L236P), and having a G-to-A transition in nt 1214, which predicted a cysteine-to-tyrosine substitution at ASB residue 405 (C405Y). These mutations did not occur in three other unrelated MPS VI patients or in 120 ASB alleles from normal individuals, indicating that they were not polymorphisms. The identification of these three ASB mutations documents the first evidence of molecular heterogeneity in MPS VI and provides an initial basis for genotype/phenotype correlations in this lysosomal storage disease.  相似文献   

15.
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17.
Lysosomal enzymes catalyze the breakdown of macromolecules in the cell. In humans, loss of activity of a lysosomal enzyme leads to an inherited metabolic defect known as a lysosomal storage disorder. The human lysosomal enzyme galactosamine-6-sulfatase (GALNS, also known as N-acetylgalactosamine-6-sulfatase and GalN6S; E.C. 3.1.6.4) is deficient in patients with the lysosomal storage disease mucopolysaccharidosis IV A (also known as MPS IV A and Morquio A). Here, we report the three-dimensional structure of human GALNS, determined by X-ray crystallography at 2.2 Å resolution. The structure reveals a catalytic gem diol nucleophile derived from modification of a cysteine side chain. The active site of GALNS is a large, positively charged trench suitable for binding polyanionic substrates such as keratan sulfate and chondroitin-6-sulfate. Enzymatic assays on the insect‐cell-expressed human GALNS indicate activity against synthetic substrates and inhibition by both substrate and product. Mapping 120 MPS IV A missense mutations onto the structure reveals that a majority of mutations affect the hydrophobic core of the structure, indicating that most MPS IV A cases result from misfolding of GALNS. Comparison of the structure of GALNS to paralogous sulfatases shows a wide variety of active‐site geometries in the family but strict conservation of the catalytic machinery. Overall, the structure and the known mutations establish the molecular basis for MPS IV A and for the larger MPS family of diseases.  相似文献   

18.
Sanfilippo syndrome type B, or mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) IIIB, is an autosomal recessive disease caused by a deficiency of lysosomal alpha-N-acetylglucosaminidase (NAGLU). In Dromaius novaehollandiae (emu), a progressive neurologic disease was recently discovered, which was characterized by NAGLU deficiency and heparan sulfate accumulation. To define the molecular basis, the sequences of the normal emu NAGLU cDNA and gene were determined by PCR-based approaches using primers for highly conserved regions of evolutionarily distant NAGLU homologues. It was observed that the emu NAGLU gene is structurally similar to that of human and mouse, but the introns are considerably shorter. The cDNA had an open reading frame (ORF) of 2259 bp. The deduced amino acid sequence is estimated to share 64% identity with human, 63% with mouse, 41% with Drosophila, 39% with tobacco, and 35% with the Caenorhabditis elegans enzyme. Three normal and two affected emus were studied for nucleotide sequence covering the entire coding region and exon-intron boundaries. Unlike the human gene, emu NAGLU appeared to be highly polymorphic: 19 variations were found in the coding region alone. The two affected emus were found to be homozygous for a 2-bp deletion, 1098-1099delGG, in exon 6. The resulting frameshift predicts a longer ORF of 2370 bp encoding a polypeptide with 37 additional amino acids and 387 altered amino acids. The availability of mutation screening in emus now permits early detection of MPS IIIB in breeding stocks and is an important step in characterizing this unique, naturally occurring avian model for the development of gene transfer studies.  相似文献   

19.
The identification of a second structural gene mutation at the feline arylsulfatase B locus (MPS VIb) provided the opportunity to investigate the expression of allelism by characterization of the residual enzymatic activity in feline mucopolysaccharidosis VI, an animal analogue of human Maroteaux-Lamy syndrome. Matings were designed to produce affected homozygotes who were homoallelic for the MPS VIa and MPS VIb mutations or heteroallelic genetic compounds (MPS VIa/VIb). The physicokinetic and immunological properties of the partially purified residual hepatic arylsulfatase B isozymes from the affected homoallelic and heteroallelic cats were compared to those of the normal feline enzyme. The residual hepatic arylsulfatase B activities from the inbred MPS VIa and MPS VIb homozygotes were distinguished by differences in physicokinetic and immunological properties. The newly identified mutant isozyme b had abnormal kinetic properties toward artificial and natural substrates, normal cryo- and thermostabilities, a normal molecular weight and an altered electrophoretic mobility. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrated that the mutant b subunits formed dimers with normal subunits in obligate heterozygotes (MPS VI+/b). In contrast, mutant isozyme a subunits from obligate MPS VIa/+ heterozygotes did not dimerize with the normal subunit, and the mutant and normal isozymes could be separated by anion exchange chromatography and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Characterization of the partially purified residual hepatic arylsulfatase B activity from the heteroallelic homozygotes revealed the presence of both mutant isozymes a and b. The demonstration of two allelic mutations in the feline arylsulfatase B gene documented the occurrence of genetic heterogeneity in feline mucopolysaccharidosis VI and permitted characterization of the enzymatic defect in homoallelic and heteroallelic (genetic compound) homozygotes, providing a model for the study of allelism in human genetic disorders.  相似文献   

20.
N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfatase (Arylsulfatase B; ARSB) is the enzyme that removes sulfate groups from the N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfate residue at the non-reducing end of chondroitin-4-sulfate (C4S) and dermatan sulfate (DS). Previous studies demonstrated reduction in cell-bound high molecular weight kininogen in normal rat kidney (NRK) epithelial cells when chondroitin-4-sulfate content was reduced following overexpression of ARSB activity, and chondroitinase ABC produced similar decline in cell-bound kininogen. Reduction in the cell-bound kininogen was associated with increase in secreted bradykinin. In this report, we extend the in vitro findings to in vivo models, and present findings in Dahl salt-sensitive (SS) rats exposed to high (SSH) and low salt (SSL) diets. In the renal tissue of the SSH rats, ARSB activity was significantly less than in the SSL rats, and chondroitin-4-sulfate and total sulfated glycosaminoglycan content were significantly greater. Disaccharide analysis confirmed marked increase in C4S disaccharides in the renal tissue of the SSH rats. In contrast, unsulfated, hyaluronan-derived disaccharides were increased in the rats on the low salt diet. In the SSH rats, with lower ARSB activity and higher C4S levels, cell-bound, high-molecular weight kininogen was greater and urinary bradykinin was lower. ARSB activity in renal tissue and NRK cells declined when exogenous chloride concentration was increased in vitro. The impact of high chloride exposure in vivo on ARSB, chondroitin-4-sulfation, and C4S-kininogen binding provides a mechanism that links dietary salt intake with bradykinin secretion and may be a factor in blood pressure regulation.  相似文献   

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