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Compound Heterozygosis in AADC Deficiency and Its Complex Phenotype in Terms of AADC Protein Population

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms231911238

Keywords

aromatic amino acid deficiency; homodimer; heterodimer; interallelic complementation; structure-function relationship; severity prediction

Funding

  1. PTC Therapeutics (United States)

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Aromatic amino acid decarboxylase (AADC) deficiency is a rare monogenic disease caused by mutations in the ddc gene. It is characterized by severe motor impairments and developmental delay. The number of patients and identified variants has increased in recent years, possibly due to ongoing gene therapy trials. Efforts are being made to achieve early diagnosis and predict clinical outcome, but no clear correlation between genotype and phenotype has been found so far.
Aromatic amino acid decarboxylase (AADC) deficiency is a rare monogenic disease due to mutations in the ddc gene producing AADC, a homodimeric pyridoxal 5 '-phosphate-dependent enzyme. The disorder is often fatal in the first decade and is characterized by profound motor impairments and developmental delay. In the last two years, there has been a net rise in the number of patients and variants identified, maybe also pushed by the ongoing gene therapy trials. The majority of the identified genotypes are compound heterozygous (about 70%). Efforts are underway to reach early diagnosis, find possible new markers/new fast methods, and predict clinical outcome. However, no clear correlation of genotype-to-phenotype exists to date. Nevertheless, for homozygous patients, reliable results have been obtained using genetic methods combined with available computational tools on crystal structures corroborated by biochemical investigations on recombinant homodimeric AADC variants that have been obtained and characterized in solution. For these variants, the molecular basis for the defect has been suggested and validated, since it correlates quite well with mildness/severity of the homozygous phenotype. Instead, prediction for compound heterozygous patients is more difficult since complementation effects could happen. Here, by analyzing the existing literature on compound heterozygosity in AADC deficiency and other genetic disorders, we highlight that, in order to assess pathogenicity, the measurement of activity of the AADC heterodimeric variant should be integrated by bioinformatic, structural, and functional data on the whole protein constellation theoretically present in such patients. A wider discussion on symptomatic heterozygosity in AADC deficiency is also presented.

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