4.7 Article

Divergent Impact of Enzyme Replacement Therapy on Human Cardiomyocytes and Enterocytes Affected by Fabry Disease: Correlation with Mannose-6-phosphate Receptor Expression

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm11051344

Keywords

Fabry disease; GLA; globotriaosylceramide; cardiomyocyte; intestine; enzyme replacement therapy; molecular and cellular rehabilitation

Funding

  1. Telethon [GGP17055]
  2. Shire IIR-ITA [002522]
  3. Shire International GmbH
  4. Ricerca corrente IRCCS L Spallanzani
  5. Italian Health Ministry [2020/1]
  6. Fondazione Roma [18/6/2019]
  7. NINDS NIH HHS/United States [U54 NS065768/NS]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigates the effects of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) on cardiomyocytes and intestinal cells in patients with Fabry disease (FD). The results show that while ERT does not significantly impact GL3 content in cardiomyocytes, it is able to remove GL3 inclusions in intestinal cells and restore their function. These divergent responses may be attributed to differences in cellular turnover and tissue IGF-II-R expression.
Background: The impact of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) on cardiomyocytes and intestinal cells, affected by Fabry disease (FD), is still unclear. Methods: Six patients with FD, including five family members with GLA mutation c.666delC and one with GLA mutation c.658C > T, manifesting cardiomyopathy and intestinal symptoms (abdominal pain, diarrhea and malabsorption) were included in the study. Clinical outcome, cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR), endomyocardial and gastro-intestinal biopsies were evaluated before and after 2 years of treatment with agalsidase-alpha (0.2 mg/kg every other week). Immunohistochemistry and Western blot assessments of mannose-6-phosphate receptors (IGF-II-R) on intestinal and myocardial frozen tissue were obtained at diagnosis and after 2 years of ERT. Results: After ERT left ventricular maximal wall thickness, ranging from pre (<10.5 mm) to mild (<15 mm) and moderate hypertrophy (16 mm), was not associated with significant changes at CMR. Degree of dyspnea, mean cardiomyocyte diameter and % vacuolated areas of cardiomyocytes, representing intracellular GL3, remained unmodified. In contrast, intestinal symptoms improved with disappearance of diarrhea, recovery of anemia and weight gain, correlating with near complete clearance of the enterocytes from GL3 inclusions. IGF-II-R expression was remarkably higher even at histochemistry in intestinal tissue compared with myocardium (p < 0.001) either at baseline and after ERT, thus justifying intestinal recovery. Conclusions: Human cells affected by FD may respond differently to ERT: while cardiomyocytes retain their GL3 content after 2 years of treatment, gastro-intestinal cells show GL3 removal with recovery of function. This divergent response may be related to differences in cellular turnover, as well as tissue IGF-II-R expression.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available