25 research outputs found
Galactosemia: Towards Pharmacological Chaperones
Galactosemia is a rare inherited metabolic disease resulting from mutations in the four
genes which encode enzymes involved in the metabolism of galactose. The current therapy, the
removal of galactose from the diet, is inadequate. Consequently, many patients suffer lifelong
physical and cognitive disability. The phenotype varies from almost asymptomatic to life-threatening
disability. The fundamental biochemical cause of the disease is a decrease in enzymatic activity due
to failure of the affected protein to fold and/or function correctly. Many novel therapies have been
proposed for the treatment of galactosemia. Often, these are designed to treat the symptoms and
not the fundamental cause. Pharmacological chaperones (PC) (small molecules which correct the
folding of misfolded proteins) represent an exciting potential therapy for galactosemia. In theory,
they would restore enzyme function, thus preventing downstream pathological consequences. In
practice, no PCs have been identified for potential application in galactosemia. Here, we review the
biochemical basis of the disease, identify opportunities for the application of PCs and describe how
these might be discovered. We will conclude by considering some of the clinical issues which will
affect the future use of PCs in the treatment of galactosemia.ERDF/Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities-State Research Agency
RTI2018-096246-B-I00FEDER/Junta de AndalucÃa - ConsejerÃa de Transformación Económica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades
P18-RT-241
The complex machinery of human cobalamin metabolism
Vitamin B (cobalamin, Cbl) is required as a cofactor by two human enzymes, 5-methyltetrahydrofolate-homocysteine methyltransferase (MTR) and methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (MMUT). Within the body, a vast array of transporters, enzymes and chaperones are required for the generation and delivery of these cofactor forms. How they perform these functions is dictated by the structure and interactions of the proteins involved, the molecular bases of which are only now being elucidated. In this review, we highlight recent insights into human Cbl metabolism and address open questions in the field by employing a protein structure and interactome based perspective. We discuss how three very similar proteins-haptocorrin, intrinsic factor and transcobalamin-exploit slight structural differences and unique ligand receptor interactions to effect selective Cbl absorption and internalisation. We describe recent advances in the understanding of how endocytosed Cbl is transported across the lysosomal membrane and the implications of the recently solved ABCD4 structure. We detail how MMACHC and MMADHC cooperate to modify and target cytosolic Cbl to the client enzymes MTR and MMUT using ingenious modifications to an ancient nitroreductase fold, and how MTR and MMUT link with their accessory enzymes to sustainably harness the supernucleophilic potential of Cbl. Finally, we provide an outlook on how future studies may combine structural and interactome based approaches and incorporate knowledge of post-translational modifications to bring further insights
Disturbed cofactor binding by a novel mutation in UDP-galactose 4 '-epimerase results in a type III galactosemia phenotype at birth
The p.A89V variant of UDP-galactose 4′-epimerase (GALE) is less stable and has lower affinity for the NAD+cofactor than the wild-type enzyme.</p
Novel homozygous variants in PRORP expand the genotypic spectrum of combined oxidative phosphorylation deficiency 54
Biallelic hypomorphic variants in PRORP have been recently described as causing the autosomal recessive disorder combined oxidative phosphorylation deficiency type 54 (COXPD54). COXPD54 encompasses a phenotypic spectrum of sensorineural hearing loss and ovarian insufficiency (Perrault syndrome) to leukodystrophy. Here, we report three additional families with homozygous missense PRORP variants with pleiotropic phenotypes. Each missense variant altered a highly conserved residue within the metallonuclease domain. In vitro mitochondrial tRNA processing assays with recombinant TRMT10C, SDR5C1 and PRORP indicated two COXPD54-associated PRORP variants, c.1159A>G (p.Thr387Ala) and c.1241C>T (p.Ala414Val), decreased pre-tRNAIle cleavage, consistent with both variants impacting tRNA processing. No significant decrease in tRNA processing was observed with PRORP c.1093T>C (p.Tyr365His), which was identified in an individual with leukodystrophy. These data provide independent evidence that PRORP variants are associated with COXPD54 and that the assessment of 5' leader mitochondrial tRNA processing is a valuable assay for the functional analysis and clinical interpretation of novel PRORP variants
Structural insights into the MMACHC-MMADHC protein complex involved in vitamin B12 trafficking
Conversion of vitamin B12 (cobalamin, Cbl) into the cofactor forms methyl-Cbl (MeCbl) and adenosyl-Cbl (AdoCbl) is required for the function of two crucial enzymes, mitochondrial methylmalonyl-CoA mutase and cytosolic methionine synthase, respectively. The intracellular proteins MMACHC and MMADHC play important roles in processing and targeting the Cbl cofactor to its destination enzymes, and recent evidence suggests that they may interact while performing these essential trafficking functions. To better understand the molecular basis of this interaction, we have mapped the crucial protein regions required, indicate that Cbl is likely processed by MMACHC prior to interaction with MMADHC, and identify patient mutations on both proteins that interfere with complex formation, via different mechanisms. We further report the crystal structure of the MMADHC C-terminal region at 2.2 Ã… resolution, revealing a modified nitroreductase fold with surprising homology to MMACHC despite their poor sequence conservation. Because MMADHC demonstrates no known enzymatic activity, we propose it as the first protein known to repurpose the nitroreductase fold solely for protein-protein interaction. Using small angle x-ray scattering, we reveal the MMACHC-MMADHC complex as a 1:1 heterodimer and provide a structural model of this interaction, where the interaction region overlaps with the MMACHC-Cbl binding site. Together, our findings provide novel structural evidence and mechanistic insight into an essential biological process, whereby an intracellular "trafficking chaperone" highly specific for a trace element cofactor functions via protein-protein interaction, which is disrupted by inherited disease mutations