4.5 Article

Biochemical and Structural Analysis of 14 Mutant ADSL Enzyme Complexes and Correlation to Phenotypic Heterogeneity of Adenylosuccinate Lyase Deficiency

Journal

HUMAN MUTATION
Volume 31, Issue 4, Pages 445-455

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/humu.21212

Keywords

adenylosuccinate lyase; ADSL deficiency; phenotype heterogeneity; de novo purine synthesis; purine nucleotide cycle; intersubunit complementation

Funding

  1. Czech Science Foundation [301/07/0600]
  2. Ministry of Education of Czech Republic [1M6837805002, MSM0021620806]

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Adenylosuccinate lyase (ADSL) deficiency is neurometabolic disease characterized by accumulation of dephosphorylated enzyme substrates SAICA-riboside (SAICAr) and succinyladenosine (S-Ado) in body fluids of affected individuals. The phenotypic severity differs considerably among patients: neonatal fatal, severe childhood, and moderate phenotypic forms correlating with different values for the ratio between S-Ado and SAICAr concentrations in cerebrospinal fluid have been distinguished. To reveal the biochemical and structural basis for this phenotypic heterogeneity, we expressed and characterized 19 ADSL mutant proteins identified in 16 patients representing clinically distinct subgroups. Respecting compound heterozygosity and considering the homotetrameric structure of ADSL, we used intersubunit complementation and prepared and characterized genotype-specific heteromeric mutant ADSL complexes. We correlated clinical phenotypes with biochemical properties of the mutant proteins and predicted structural impacts of the mutations. We found that phenotypic severity in ADSL deficiency is correlated with residual enzymatic activity and structural stability of the corresponding mutant ADSL complexes and does not seem to result from genotype-specific disproportional catalytic activities toward one of the enzyme substrates. This suggests that the S-Ado/SAICAr ratio is probably not predictive of phenotype severity; rather, it may be secondary to the degree of the patient's development (i.e., to the age of the patient at the time of sample collection). Hum Mutat 31:445-455, 2010. (C) 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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