Literature DB >> 16531566

Pharmacological chaperone corrects lysosomal storage in Fabry disease caused by trafficking-incompetent variants.

Gary Hin-Fai Yam1, Nils Bosshard, Christian Zuber, Beat Steinmann, Jürgen Roth.   

Abstract

Fabry disease is a lysosomal storage disorder caused by deficiency of alpha-galactosidase A (alpha-Gal A) resulting in lysosomal accumulation of glycosphingolipid globotriosylceramide Gb3. Misfolded alpha-Gal A variants can have residual enzyme activity but are unstable. Their lysosomal trafficking is impaired because they are retained in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by quality control. Subinhibitory doses of the competitive inhibitor of alpha-Gal A, 1-deoxygalactonojirimycin (DGJ), stabilize mutant alpha-Gal A in vitro and correct the trafficking defect. We showed by immunolabeling that the chaperone-like action of DGJ significantly reduces the lysosomal Gb3 storage in human Fabry fibroblasts harboring the novel mutations T194I and V390fsX8. The specificity of the DGJ effect was proven by RNA interference. Electron microscopic morphometry demonstrated a reduction of large-size, disease-associated lysosomes and loss of characteristic multilamellar lysosomal inclusions on DGJ treatment. In addition, the pre-Golgi intermediates were decreased. However, the rough ER was not different between DGJ-treated and untreated cells. Pulse-chase experiments revealed that DGJ treatment resulted in maturation and stabilization of mutant alpha-Gal A. Genes involved in cell stress signaling, heat shock response, unfolded protein response, and ER-associated degradation show no apparent difference in expression between untreated and DGJ-treated fibroblasts. The DGJ treatment has no apparent cytotoxic effects. Thus our data show the usefulness of a pharmacological chaperone for correction of the lysosomal storage in Fabry fibroblasts harboring different mutations with residual enzyme activity. Pharmacological chaperones acting on misfolded, unstable mutant proteins that exhibit residual biological activity offer a convenient and cost-efficient therapeutic strategy.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16531566     DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00426.2005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Cell Physiol        ISSN: 0363-6143            Impact factor:   4.249


  51 in total

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6.  Effects of pH and iminosugar pharmacological chaperones on lysosomal glycosidase structure and stability.

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7.  Unfolding the Therapeutic Potential of Chemical Chaperones for Age-related Macular Degeneration.

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9.  The pharmacological chaperone 1-deoxygalactonojirimycin reduces tissue globotriaosylceramide levels in a mouse model of Fabry disease.

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Review 10.  Glycosidase inhibition: assessing mimicry of the transition state.

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