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1.
Microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase catalyses the last step in liver glucose production. Glucose-6-phosphatase deficiency, now termed type 1 glycogen storage disease, was first described almost 40 years ago but until recently very little was known about the molecular basis of the various type 1 glycogen storage diseases. Recently we have shown that at least six different proteins are needed for normal glucose-6-phosphatase activity in liver. Four of the proteins have been purified and three cloned. Study of the type 1 glycogen storage diseases has stimulated investigations of the mechanisms of small molecule transport across the endoplasmic reticulum membrane and demonstrated the existence of novel endoplasmic reticulum transport proteins for glucose and phosphate.  相似文献   

2.
The lysosomal system is the main intracellular mechanism for the catabolism of naturally occurring endogenous and exogenous macromolecules and the subsequent recycling of their constituent monomeric components. It also plays an important part in processing essential metabolites. A genetic defect in a protein responsible for maintaining the lysosomal system results in the accumulation within lysosomes of partially degraded molecules, the initial step in the process leading to a lysosomal storage disease. The defective protein can be a luminal lysosomal enzyme or protein cofactor, a lysosomal membrane protein or a protein involved in the post-translational modification or transport of lysosomal proteins. Over 40 lysosomal storage diseases are known and they have a collective incidence of approximately 1 in 7000-8000 live births. Most of the genes for the lysosomal proteins have been cloned, permitting mutation analysis in individual cases. This information can be used for genotype/phenotype correlation, genetic counselling and the selection of patients for novel forms of therapy, such as substrate deprivation or dispersal, enzyme replacement, bone-marrow transplantation and gene transfer.  相似文献   

3.
Glycogen storage disease type 1a is caused by a deficiency in glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase), a nine-helical endoplasmic reticulum transmembrane protein required for maintenance of glucose homeostasis. To date, 75 G6Pase mutations have been identified, including 48 mutations resulting in single-amino acid substitutions. However, only 19 missense mutations have been functionally characterized. Here, we report the results of structure and function studies of the 48 missense mutations and the DeltaF327 codon deletion mutation, grouped as active site, helical, and nonhelical mutations. The 5 active site mutations and 22 of the 31 helical mutations completely abolished G6Pase activity, but only 5 of the 13 nonhelical mutants were devoid of activity. Whereas the active site and nonhelical mutants supported the synthesis of G6Pase protein in a manner similar to that of the wild-type enzyme, immunoblot analysis showed that the majority (64.5%) of helical mutations destabilized G6Pase. Furthermore, we show that degradation of both wild-type and mutant G6Pase is inhibited by lactacystin, a potent proteasome inhibitor. Taken together, we have generated a data base of residual G6Pase activity retained by G6Pase mutants, established the critical roles of transmembrane helices in the stability and activity of this phosphatase, and shown that G6Pase is a substrate for proteasome-mediated degradation.  相似文献   

4.
Glycogen storage disease type 1 (GSD 1) results from deficiency of the microsomal multicomponent glucose-6-phosphatase system. Malfunction of the catalytic subunit characterises GSD 1a. GSD 1b and GSD 1c are characterised by defective microsomal glucose-6-phosphate or pyrophosphate/phosphate transport, respectively. Recently, a gene encoding a microsomal transporter protein has been found to be mutated in GSD 1b and 1c patients. Here, we report the genomic sequence of the transporter gene and the detection of a homozygous 2-bp deletion (1211delCT) and a homozygous donor splice site mutation (317+1G→T) in two GSD 1c patients, confirming that GSD 1c is allelic to GSD 1b. Received: 16 October 1998 / Accepted: 11 January 1998  相似文献   

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The molecular basis of copper-transport diseases   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Copper (Cu) is a potentially toxic yet essential element. MENKES DISEASE, a copper deficiency disorder, and WILSON DISEASE, a copper toxicosis condition, are two human genetic disorders, caused by mutations of two closely related Cu-transporting ATPases. Both molecules efflux copper from cells. Quite diverse clinical phenotypes are produced by different mutations of these two Cu-transporting proteins. The understanding of copper homeostasis has become increasingly important in clinical medicine as the metal could be involved in the pathogenesis of some important neurological disorders such as Alzheimer's disease, motor neurone diseases and prion diseases.  相似文献   

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Molecular studies on glycogen storage diseases   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
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The genome of Streptococcus pneumoniae strains, as typified by the TIGR4 strain, contain several genes encoding proteins putatively involved in α‐glucan degradation, modification and synthesis. The extracellular components comprise an ATP binding cassette‐transporter with its solute binding protein, MalX, and the hydrolytic enzyme SpuA. We show that of the commonly occurring exogenous α‐glucans, S. pneumoniae TIGR4 is only able to grow on glycogen in a MalX‐ and SpuA‐dependent manner. SpuA is able to degrade glycogen into a ladder of α‐1,4‐glucooligosaccharides while the high‐affinity interaction (Ka ~ 106 M?1) of MalX with maltooligosaccharides plays a key role in promoting the selective uptake of the glycogen degradation products that are produced by SpuA. The X‐ray crystallographic analyses of apo‐ and complexed MalX illuminate the protein's specificity for the degradation products of glycogen and its striking ability to recognize the helical structure of the ligand. Overall, the results of this work provide new structural and functional insight into streptococcal α‐glucan metabolism while supplying biochemical support for the hypothesis that the substrate of the S. pneumoniaeα‐glucan metabolizing machinery is glycogen, which in a human host is abundant in lung epithelial cells, a common target for invasive S. pneumoniae.  相似文献   

11.
Glycogen storage disease type II (GSD-II), also known as Pompe disease, is a fatal genetic muscle disorder caused by a deficiency of acid alpha-glucosidase, a glycogen-degrading lysosomal enzyme. Currently, there is no treatment for this fatal disorder. However, several lines of research suggest the possibility of future treatment. Enzyme replacement strategies hold the greatest hope for patients currently affected by GSD-II, but future strategies could include in vivo or ex vivo gene therapy approaches and/or mesenchymal stem cell or bone-marrow transplantation approaches. Each of the approaches might eventually be combined to further improve the overall clinical efficacy of any one treatment regimen. The lessons learned from GSD-II research will also benefit a great number of individuals affected by other genetic disorders.  相似文献   

12.
Deficiency of the glycogen debranching enzyme (gene, AGL) causes glycogen storage disease type III (GSD-III), an autosomal recessive disease affecting glycogen metabolism. Most GSD-III patients have AGL deficiency in both the liver and muscle (type IIIa), but some have it in the liver but not muscle (type IIIb). Cloning of human AGL cDNAs and determination of the genomic structure and mRNA isoforms of AGL have allowed for the study of GSD-III at the molecular level. In turn, the resulting information has greatly facilitated our understanding of the molecular basis of this storage disease with remarkable clinical and enzymatic variability. In this review, we summarize all 31 GSD-III mutations in the literature and discuss their clinical and laboratory implications. Most of the mutations are nonsense mutations caused by a nucleotide substitution or small insertion or deletion; only one is caused by a missense amino acid change. Some important genotype-phenotype correlation have emerged, in particular, that exon 3 mutations (17delAG and Q6X) are specifically associated with GSD-IIIb. Three other mutations have appeared to have some phenotype correlation. Specifically, the splice mutation IVS32-12A>G was found in GSD-III patients having mild clinical symptoms, while the mutations 3965delT and 4529insA are associated with a severe phenotype and early onset of clinical manifestations. A molecular diagnostic scheme has been proposed to diagnose GSD-III noninvasively. The characterization of AGL mutations in GSD-III patients has also helped the structure-function analysis of this bifunctional enzyme important for glycogen metabolism.  相似文献   

13.
Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD-IV), also known as Andersen disease or amylopectinosis (MIM 23250), is a rare autosomal recessive disorder caused by a deficiency of glycogen branching enzyme (GBE) leading to the accumulation of amylopectin-like structures in affected tissues. The disease is extremely heterogeneous in terms of tissue involvement, age of onset and clinical manifestations. The human GBE cDNA is approximately 3-kb in length and encodes a 702-amino acid protein. The GBE amino acid sequence shows a high degree of conservation throughout species. The human GBE gene is located on chromosome 3p14 and consists of 16 exons spanning at least 118 kb of chromosomal DNA. Clinically the classic Andersen disease is a rapidly progressive disorder leading to terminal liver failure unless liver transplantation is performed. Several mutations have been reported in the GBE gene in patients with classic phenotype. Mutations in the GBE gene have also been identified in patients with the milder non-progressive hepatic form of the disease. Several other variants of GSD-IV have been reported: a variant with multi-system involvement including skeletal and cardiac muscle, nerve and liver; a juvenile polysaccharidosis with multi-system involvement but normal GBE activity; and the fatal neonatal neuromuscular form associated with a splice site mutation in the GBE gene. Other presentations include cardiomyopathy, arthrogryposis and even hydrops fetalis. Polyglucosan body disease, characterized by widespread upper and lower motor neuron lesions, can present with or without GBE deficiency indicating that different biochemical defects could result in an identical phenotype. It is evident that this disease exists in multiple forms with enzymatic and molecular heterogeneity unparalleled in the other types of glycogen storage diseases.  相似文献   

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Aminoacylase 1 is a zinc-binding enzyme which hydrolyzes N-acetyl amino acids into the free amino acid and acetic acid. Deficiency of aminoacylase 1 due to mutations in the aminoacylase 1 (ACY1) gene follows an autosomal-recessive trait of inheritance and is characterized by accumulation of N-acetyl amino acids in the urine. In affected individuals neurological findings such as febrile seizures, delay of psychomotor development and moderate mental retardation have been reported. Except for one missense mutation which has been studied in Escherichia coli, mutations underlying aminoacylase 1 deficiency have not been characterized so far. This has prompted us to approach expression studies of all mutations known to occur in aminoacylase 1 deficient individuals in a human cell line (HEK293), thus providing the authentic human machinery for posttranslational modifications. Mutations were inserted using site directed mutagenesis and aminoacylase 1 enzyme activity was assessed in cells overexpressing aminoacylase 1, using mainly the natural high affinity substrate N-acetyl methionine. Overexpression of the wild type enzyme in HEK293 cells resulted in an approximately 50-fold increase of the aminoacylase 1 activity of homogenized cells. Most mutations resulted in a nearly complete loss of enzyme function. Notably, the two newly discovered mutations p.Arg378Trp, p.Arg378Gln and the mutation p.Arg393His yielded considerable residual activity of the enzyme, which is tentatively explained by their intramolecular localization and molecular characteristics. In contrast to aminoacylase 1 variants which showed no detectable aminoacylase 1 activity, aminoacylase 1 proteins with the mutations p.Arg378Trp, p.Arg378Gln and p.Arg393His were also detected in Western blot analysis. Investigations of the molecular bases of additional cases of aminoacylase 1 deficiency contribute to a better understanding of this inborn error of metabolism whose clinical significance and long-term consequences remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

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Glycogen storage disease type 1b (GSD-1b) is proposed to be caused by a deficiency in microsomal glucose 6-phosphate (G6P) transport, causing a loss of glucose-6-phosphatase activity and glucose homeostasis. However, for decades, this disorder has defied molecular characterization. In this study, we characterize the structural organization of the G6P transporter gene and identify mutations in the gene that segregate with the GSD-1b disorder. We report the functional characterization of the recombinant G6P transporter and demonstrate that mutations uncovered in GSD-1b patients disrupt G6P transport. Our results, for the first time, define a molecular basis for functional deficiency in GSD-1b and raise the possibility that the defective G6P transporter contributes to neutropenia and neutrophil/monocyte dysfunctions characteristic of GSD-1b patients.  相似文献   

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JJ Shieh  YH Lu  SW Huang  YH Huang  CH Sun  HJ Chiou  C Liu  MY Lo  CY Lin  DM Niu 《Gene》2012,509(1):154-157
The manifestations of glycogen storage disease type 1a (GSD 1a) are usually so prominent in childhood that it is readily diagnosed by pediatricians. However, a mild form of the disease may only become apparent during adolescence or adulthood. We observed a brother and sister with subtle manifestations of the disease, which was discovered after the brother's son was diagnosed with typical GSD 1a. The adult siblings never suffered from hypoglycemia, had normal fasting blood glucose and liver transaminases at the time of diagnosis, and were taller than average for Chinese. Their only notable disease manifestations were recurrent gouty arthritis associated with hyperuricemia and hyperlipidemia during adolescence. When diagnosed, the brother had multiple benign and malignant hepatic tumors, and died of fulminant metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma 6months after liver transplantation. p.M121V/p.R83H and p.M121V/p.M121V genotypic constellations of the G6PC gene were identified in this family. Both siblings were homozygous for the newly identified p.M121V mutation. The infant had compound heterozygous mutations, p.R83H and p.M121V. We recommend that mild GSD should be considered in the adolescents with unexplained hyperuricemia and hyperlipidemia, despite the presence of normal blood glucose levels. This report also reminds us that hepatocellular carcinoma could develop even in very mild GSD 1a patients.  相似文献   

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