| Literature DB >> 19728872 |
Frédérique Sabourdy1, Pierre Labauge, Hilde Monica Frostad Riise Stensland, Michèle Nieto, Violeta Latorre Garcés, Dimitri Renard, Giovanni Castelnovo, Nicolas de Champfleur, Thierry Levade.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: beta-Mannosidosis (OMIM 248510) is a rare inborn lysosomal storage disorder caused by the deficient activity of beta-mannosidase, an enzyme encoded by a single gene (MANBA) located on chromosome 4q22-25. To date, only 20 cases of this autosomal recessive disorder have been described and 14 different MANBA mutations were incriminated in the disease. These are all null mutations or missense mutations that abolish beta-mannosidase activity. In this study, we characterized the molecular defect of a new case of beta-mannosidosis, presenting with a severe neurological disorder.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19728872 PMCID: PMC2745377 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2350-10-84
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
β-Mannosidase activity in the family.
| I-1 (father) | 51; 42 | 20 | 115; 90 |
| I-2 (mother) | 50; 35 | 16 | 75; 51 |
| II-1 | 51; 60 | 29 | 127; 102 |
| II-2 | 4; 8 | 6; 7 | 24 |
| II-3 | 92; 167 | ND | 160; 115 |
| II-4 | 68 | ND | 93; 84 |
| Controls | 86 ± 26 (n = 25) | 58 ± 19 (n = 4) | 174 ± 45 (n = 12) |
β-Mannosidase activity was determined in peripheral blood leukocytes, Epstein-Barr virus-transformed lymphoid cells and plasma from family members (see Figure 1A). Enzyme activity is expressed as nmol/h.mg of protein (for cells) or nmol/h.ml (for plasma). For patients, the different values correspond to independent experiments; for controls, means ± SEM of the indicated number of different samples. ND, not determined.
Figure 1Segregation of the c.1922G>A . A, Family pedigree. The arrow denotes the proband. Genetic status for the c.1922G>A mutation is indicated by black and white symbols. B, Restriction enzyme analysis of exon 14 in the patient, his family and three control subjects (denoted C1 to C3). PCR-amplified exon 14 (a 423 bp fragment) was digested with MaeIII or BbvI and analyzed by gel electrophoresis.
Figure 2Enzymatic activities in transfected HEK293T cells. A, Acid β-mannosidase, acid β-galactosidase and E. coli β-galactosidase activities were measured in lysates of untransfected HEK293T cells and cells over-expressing either the wild-type (pCS2-MANBA) or the mutant (pCS2-MANBA-p.Arg641His) acid β-mannosidase. Activities are expressed as nmol/h.mg protein, and are means ± SEM of 3 independent experiments performed in duplicate. The β-mannosidase activity was similar in untransfected cells and cells transfected only with the vector encoding the bacterial β-galactosidase (data not shown).
Figure 3Expression of endogenous and overexpressed β-mannosidase. Lysates of control and patient's lymphoid cells (100 μg protein), as well as HEK293T cells transiently transfected with a vector encoding wild-type (pCS2-MANBA) or mutant (pCS2-MANBA-p.Arg641His) β-mannosidase (25 μg protein), were assessed for β-mannosidase expression by Western-blot analysis. NT, not transfected.