Mild/moderate phenotypes in AADC deficiency: Focus on the aromatic amino acid decarboxylase protein.

IF 4.2 2区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease Pub Date : 2024-08-21 DOI:10.1002/jimd.12791
Giovanni Bisello, Rossella Franchini, Cristian Andres Carmona Carmona, Mariarita Bertoldi
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Abstract

AADC deficiency is a severe neurometabolic inherited rare disorder due to the absence or decrease of dopamine and serotonin levels, causing deep motor and neurodevelopmental impairments. The disease is often fatal in the first decade of life, and pharmacological treatments (dopamine agonists, pyridoxine, and monoamine oxidase inhibitors as the first-line choices) can only alleviate the symptoms. Gene therapy surgery is now available for severe patients in the European Union and the United Kingdom, and follow-up data witness encouraging improvements. In the past few years, mostly due to the increased awareness and knowledge of AADC deficiency, together with newborn screening programs and advancements in methods for genetic diagnosis, the number of mild/moderate phenotypes of AADC deficiency patients has increased to 12% of the total. A review of the genotypes (homozygous/compound heterozygous) of AADC deficiency mild/moderate patients is presented here. The pathogenicity classification of each genetic variant is discussed. Then, we focused on the type of AADC protein possessed by patients and on the predictable structural score of the homodimeric/heterodimeric species of each protein variant. Since the terminology used for genetic and protein variants is the same, we highlighted how it could be misleading. We analyzed the loss-of-function as a fold-change decrease of activity of the recombinant purified AADC enzyme(s) theoretically synthesized by mild/moderate patients. A minimal residual kcat of 8% and/or kcat/Km of 1% seems necessary to avoid a severe disease manifestation. Overall, this cluster of mild/moderate patients needs consideration for a more appropriate and aimed therapeutic approach.

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AADC 缺乏症的轻度/中度表型:关注芳香族氨基酸脱羧酶蛋白。
AADC缺乏症是一种严重的神经代谢性遗传罕见病,由于多巴胺和5-羟色胺水平缺失或降低,导致深度运动和神经发育障碍。这种疾病通常在患者出生后的头十年致命,药物治疗(多巴胺激动剂、吡哆醇和单胺氧化酶抑制剂为一线选择)只能缓解症状。目前,欧盟和英国的重症患者可以接受基因治疗手术,随访数据显示,病情得到了令人鼓舞的改善。在过去的几年中,主要由于人们对 AADC 缺乏症的认识和了解的增加,再加上新生儿筛查计划和基因诊断方法的进步,轻度/中度表型的 AADC 缺乏症患者人数已增至总人数的 12%。本文回顾了 AADC 缺乏症轻度/中度患者的基因型(同型/复合杂合型)。讨论了每种基因变异的致病性分类。然后,我们重点讨论了患者所拥有的 AADC 蛋白的类型,以及每种蛋白变体的同源二聚体/异源二聚体的可预测结构得分。由于基因变异和蛋白变异使用的术语相同,我们强调了这一术语可能产生的误导。我们以轻度/中度患者理论上合成的重组纯化 AADC 酶活性的折减变化来分析功能缺失。最小残余 kcat 为 8%和/或 kcat/Km 为 1%似乎是避免严重疾病表现的必要条件。总之,这组轻度/中度患者需要考虑采取更合适、更有针对性的治疗方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
9.50
自引率
7.10%
发文量
117
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease (JIMD) is the official journal of the Society for the Study of Inborn Errors of Metabolism (SSIEM). By enhancing communication between workers in the field throughout the world, the JIMD aims to improve the management and understanding of inherited metabolic disorders. It publishes results of original research and new or important observations pertaining to any aspect of inherited metabolic disease in humans and higher animals. This includes clinical (medical, dental and veterinary), biochemical, genetic (including cytogenetic, molecular and population genetic), experimental (including cell biological), methodological, theoretical, epidemiological, ethical and counselling aspects. The JIMD also reviews important new developments or controversial issues relating to metabolic disorders and publishes reviews and short reports arising from the Society''s annual symposia. A distinction is made between peer-reviewed scientific material that is selected because of its significance for other professionals in the field and non-peer- reviewed material that aims to be important, controversial, interesting or entertaining (“Extras”).
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