28 research outputs found
Genetic basis of hyperlysinemia
Background: Hyperlysinemia is an autosomal recessive inborn error of L-lysine degradation. To date only one causal mutation in the AASS gene encoding aminoadipic semialdehyde synthase has been reported. We aimed to better define the genetic basis of hyperlysinemia. Methods. We collected the clinical, biochemical and molecular data in a cohort of 8 hyperlysinemia patients with distinct neurological features. Results: We found novel causal mutations in AASS in all affected individuals, including 4 missense mutations, 2 deletions and 1 duplication. In two patients originating from one family, the hyperlysinemia was caused by a contiguous gene deletion syndrome affecting AASS and PTPRZ1. Conclusions: Hyperlysinemia is caused by mutations in AASS. As hyperlysinemia is generally considered a benign metabolic variant, the more severe neurological disease course in two patients with a contiguous deletion syndrome may be explained by the additional loss of PTPRZ1. Our findings illustrate the importance of detailed biochemical and genetic studies in any hyperlysinemia patient
ACAD9, a complex I assembly factor with a moonlighting function in fatty acid oxidation deficiencies
Oxidative phosphorylation and fatty acid oxidation are two major metabolic pathways in mitochondria. Acyl-CoA dehydrogenase 9 (ACAD9), an enzyme assumed to play a role in fatty acid oxidation, was recently identified as a factor involved in complex I biogenesis. Here we further investigated the role of ACAD9's enzymatic activity in fatty acid oxidation and complex I biogenesis. We provide evidence indicating that ACAD9 displays enzyme activity in vivo. Knockdown experiments in very-long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (VLCAD)-deficient fibroblasts revealed that ACAD9 is responsible for the production of C14:1-carnitine from oleate and C12-carnitine from palmitate. These results explain the origin of these obscure acylcarnitines that are used to diagnose VLCAD deficiency in humans. Knockdown of ACAD9 in control fibroblasts did not reveal changes in the acylcarnitine profiles upon fatty acid loading. Next, we investigated whether catalytic activity of ACAD9 was necessary for complex I biogenesis. Catalytically inactive ACAD9 gave partial-to-complete rescue of complex I biogenesis in ACAD9-deficient cells and was incorporated in high-molecular-weight assembly intermediates. Our results underscore the importance of the ACAD9 protein in complex I assembly and suggest that the enzymatic activity is a rudiment of the duplication even
Aberrant protein acylation is a common observation in inborn errors of acyl-CoA metabolism
Inherited disorders of acyl-CoA metabolism, such as defects in amino acid metabolism and fatty acid oxidation can present with severe clinical symptoms either neonatally or later in life, but the pathophysiological mechanisms are often incompletely understood. We now report the discovery of a novel biochemical mechanism that could contribute to the pathophysiology of these disorders. We identified increased protein lysine butyrylation in short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (SCAD) deficient mice as a result of the accumulation of butyryl-CoA. Similarly, in SCAD deficient fibroblasts, lysine butyrylation was increased. Furthermore, malonyl-CoA decarboxylase (MCD) deficient patient cells had increased levels of malonylated lysines and propionyl-CoA carboxylase (PCC) deficient patient cells had increased propionylation of lysines. Since lysine acylation can greatly impact protein function, aberrant lysine acylation in inherited disorders associated with acyl-CoA accumulation may well play a role in their disease pathophysiology
Prediction of phenotypic severity in mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA
Mucopolysaccharidosis IIIA or Sanfilippo disease type A is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder presenting in early childhood, caused by an inherited deficiency of the lysosomal hydrolase sulfamidase. New missense mutations, for which genotype-phenotype correlations are currently unknown, are frequently reported, hampering early prediction of phenotypic severity and efficacy assessment of new disease-modifying treatments. We aimed to design a method to determine phenotypic severity early in the disease course. Fifty-three patients were included for whom skin fibroblasts and data on disease course and mutation analysis were available. Patients were phenotypically characterized on clinical data as rapidly progressing or slowly progressing. Sulfamidase activity was measured in fibroblasts cultured at 37 °C and at 30 °C. Sulfamidase activity in fibroblasts from patients homozygous or compound heterozygous for a combination of known severe mutations remained below the limit of quantification under both culture conditions. In contrast, sulfamidase activity in fibroblasts from patients homozygous or compound heterozygous for a known mild mutation increased above the limit of quantification when cultured at 30 °C. With division on the basis of the patients' phenotype, fibroblasts from slowly progressing patients could be separated from rapidly progressing patients by increase in sulfamidase activity when cultured at 30 °C (p  < 0.001, sensitivity = 96%, specificity = 93%). Phenotypic severity strongly correlates with the potential to increase sulfamidase activity in fibroblasts cultured at 30 °C, allowing reliable distinction between patients with rapidly progressing or slowly progressing phenotypes. This method may provide an essential tool for assessment of treatment effects and for health care and life planning decisions. Ann Neurol 2017;82:686-69
Characterization of L-aminocarnitine, an inhibitor of fatty acid oxidation
The pathogenesis of hypoketotic hypoglycemia and cardiomyopathy in patients with fatty acid oxidation (FAO) disorders is still poorly understood. In vitro studies are hampered by the lack of natural mutants to asses the effect of FAO inhibition. In addition, only a few inhibitors of FAO are known. Furthermore, most inhibitors of FAO are activating ligands of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs). We show that l-aminocarnitine (L-AC), a carnitine analog, inhibits FAO efficiently, but does not activate PPAR. L-AC inhibits carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT) with different sensitivities towards CPT1 and CPT2, as well as carnitine acylcarnitine translocase (CACT). We further characterized L-AC using fibroblasts cell lines from controls and patients with different FAO defects. In these cell lines acylcarnitine profiles were determined in culture medium after loading with [U-(13)C]palmitic acid. In control fibroblasts, L-AC inhibits FAO leading to a reduction of C2-acylcarnitine and elevation of C16-acylcarnitine. In very long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (VLCAD)-deficient fibroblasts, L-AC decreased the elevated C14-acylcarnitine and increased C16-acylcarnitine. In CACT and CPT2-deficient cell lines, L-AC did not change the already elevated C16-acylcarnitine level, showing that CPT1 is not inhibited. Oxidation of pristanic acid was only partly inhibited at high L-AC concentrations, indicating minimal CACT inhibition. Therefore, we conclude that in intact cells L-AC inhibits CPT2. Combined with our observation that l-AC does not activate PPAR, we suggest that L-AC is useful to simulate a FAO defect in cells from different origi
Peroxisomes contribute to the acylcarnitine production when the carnitine shuttle is deficient
Fatty acid β-oxidation may occur in both mitochondria and peroxisomes. While peroxisomes oxidize specific carboxylic acids such as very long-chain fatty acids, branched-chain fatty acids, bile acids, and fatty dicarboxylic acids, mitochondria oxidize long-, medium-, and short-chain fatty acids. Oxidation of long-chain substrates requires the carnitine shuttle for mitochondrial access but medium-chain fatty acid oxidation is generally considered carnitine-independent. Using control and carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2 (CPT2)- and carnitine/acylcarnitine translocase (CACT)-deficient human fibroblasts, we investigated the oxidation of lauric acid (C12:0). Measurement of the acylcarnitine profile in the extracellular medium revealed significantly elevated levels of extracellular C10- and C12-carnitine in CPT2- and CACT-deficient fibroblasts. The accumulation of C12-carnitine indicates that lauric acid also uses the carnitine shuttle to access mitochondria. Moreover, the accumulation of extracellular C10-carnitine in CPT2- and CACT-deficient cells suggests an extramitochondrial pathway for the oxidation of lauric acid. Indeed, in the absence of peroxisomes C10-carnitine is not produced, proving that this intermediate is a product of peroxisomal β-oxidation. In conclusion, when the carnitine shuttle is impaired lauric acid is partly oxidized in peroxisomes. This peroxisomal oxidation could be a compensatory mechanism to metabolize straight medium- and long-chain fatty acids, especially in cases of mitochondrial fatty acid β-oxidation deficiency or overloa
Increased protein propionylation contributes to mitochondrial dysfunction in liver cells and fibroblasts, but not in myotubes
Post-translational protein modifications derived from metabolic intermediates, such as acyl-CoAs, have been shown to regulate mitochondrial function. Patients with a genetic defect in the propionyl-CoA carboxylase (PCC) gene clinically present symptoms related to mitochondrial disorders and are characterised by decreased mitochondrial respiration. Since propionyl-CoA accumulates in PCC deficient patients and protein propionylation can be driven by the level of propionyl-CoA, we hypothesised that protein propionylation could play a role in the pathology of the disease. Indeed, we identified increased protein propionylation due to pathologic propionyl-CoA accumulation in patient-derived fibroblasts and this was accompanied by defective mitochondrial respiration, as was shown by a decrease in complex I-driven respiration. To mimic pathological protein propionylation levels, we exposed cultured fibroblasts, Fao liver cells and C2C12 muscle myotubes to propionate levels that are typically found in these patients. This induced a global increase in protein propionylation and histone protein propionylation and was also accompanied by a decrease in mitochondrial respiration in liver and fibroblasts. However, in C2C12 myotubes propionate exposure did not decrease mitochondrial respiration, possibly due to differences in propionyl-CoA metabolism as compared to the liver. Therefore, protein propionylation could contribute to the pathology in these patients, especially in the liver, and could therefore be an interesting target to pursue in the treatment of this metabolic disease
Mitochondrial protein acetylation is driven by acetyl-CoA from fatty acid oxidation
Mitochondria integrate metabolic networks for maintaining bioenergetic requirements. Deregulation of mitochondrial metabolic networks can lead to mitochondrial dysfunction, which is a common hallmark of many diseases. Reversible post-translational protein acetylation modifications are emerging as critical regulators of mitochondrial function and form a direct link between metabolism and protein function, via the metabolic intermediate acetyl-CoA. Sirtuins catalyze protein deacetylation, but how mitochondrial acetylation is determined is unclear. We report here a mechanism that explains mitochondrial protein acetylation dynamics in vivo. Food withdrawal in mice induces a rapid increase in hepatic protein acetylation. Furthermore, using a novel LC-MS/MS method, we were able to quantify protein acetylation in human fibroblasts. We demonstrate that inducing fatty acid oxidation in fibroblasts increases protein acetylation. Furthermore, we show by using radioactively labeled palmitate that fatty acids are a direct source for mitochondrial protein acetylation. Intriguingly, in a mouse model that resembles human very-long chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (VLCAD) deficiency, we demonstrate that upon food-withdrawal, hepatic protein hyperacetylation is absent. This indicates that functional fatty acid oxidation is necessary for protein acetylation to occur in the liver upon food withdrawal. Furthermore, we now demonstrate that protein acetylation is abundant in human liver peroxisomes, an organelle where acetyl-CoA is solely generated by fatty acid oxidation. Our findings provide a mechanism for metabolic control of protein acetylation, which provides insight into the pathophysiogical role of protein acetylation dynamics in fatty acid oxidation disorders and other metabolic diseases associated with mitochondrial dysfunctio
A mutation creating an upstream translation initiation codon in SLC22A5 5'UTR is a frequent cause of primary carnitine deficiency
Primary carnitine deficiency is caused by a defect in the active cellular uptake of carnitine by Na+ -dependent organic cation transporter novel 2 (OCTN2). Genetic diagnostic yield for this metabolic disorder has been relatively low, suggesting that disease-causing variants are missed. We Sanger sequenced the 5' untranslated region (UTR) of SLC22A5 in individuals with possible primary carnitine deficiency in whom no or only one mutant allele had been found. We identified a novel 5'-UTR c.-149G>A variant which we characterized by expression studies with reporter constructs in HeLa cells and by carnitine-transport measurements in fibroblasts using a newly developed sensitive assay based on tandem mass spectrometry. This variant, which we identified in 57 of 236 individuals of our cohort, introduces a functional upstream out-of-frame translation initiation codon. We show that the codon suppresses translation from the wild-type ATG of SLC22A5, resulting in reduced OCTN2 protein levels and concomitantly lower transport activity. With an allele frequency of 24.2% the c.-149G>A variant is the most frequent cause of primary carnitine deficiency in our cohort and may explain other reported cases with an incomplete genetic diagnosis. Individuals carrying this variant should be clinically re-evaluated and monitored to determine if this variant has clinical consequences
Mitochondrial long chain fatty acid beta-oxidation in man and mouse
Several mouse models for mitochondrial fatty acid beta-oxidation (FAO) defects have been developed. So far, these models have contributed little to our current understanding of the pathophysiology. The objective of this study was to explore differences between murine and human FAO. Using a combination of analytical, biochemical and molecular methods, we compared fibroblasts of long chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase knockout (LCAD(-/-)), very long chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase knockout (VLCAD(-/-)) and wild type mice with fibroblasts of VLCAD-deficient patients and human controls. We show that in mice, LCAD and VLCAD have overlapping and distinct roles in FAO. The absence of VLCAD is apparently fully compensated, whereas LCAD deficiency is not. LCAD plays an essential role in the oxidation of unsaturated fatty acids such as oleic acid, but seems redundant in the oxidation of saturated fatty acids. In strong contrast, LCAD is neither detectable at the mRNA level nor at the protein level in men, making VLCAD indispensable in FAO. Our findings open new avenues to employ the existing mouse models to study the pathophysiology of human FAO defect