| Literature DB >> 20509947 |
Louise L C Pinto1, Taiane A Vieira, Roberto Giugliani, Ida V D Schwartz.
Abstract
Most lysosomal diseases (LD) are inherited as autosomal recessive traits, but two important conditions have X-linked inheritance: Fabry disease and Mucopolysaccharidosis II (MPS II). These two diseases show a very different pattern regarding expression on heterozygotes, which does not seem to be explained by the X-inactivation mechanism only. While MPS II heterozygotes are asymptomatic in most instances, in Fabry disease most of female carriers show some disease manifestation, which is sometimes severe. It is known that there is a major difference among X-linked diseases depending on the cell autonomy of the gene product involved and, therefore, on the occurrence of cross-correction. Since lysosomal enzymes are usually secreted and uptaken by neighbor cells, the different findings between MPS II and Fabry disease heterozygotes can also be due to different efficiency of cross-correction (higher in MPS II and lower in Fabry disease). In this paper, we review these two X-linked LD in order to discuss the mechanisms that could explain the different rates of penetrance and expressivity observed in the heterozygotes; this could be helpful to better understand the expression of X-linked traits.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20509947 PMCID: PMC2889886 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-5-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Classification of LSDs (adapted from Platt and Walkley, 2004 [2])
| Molecular defect | Enzyme deficiency | Disease example | OMIM number |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary lysosomal hydrolase defect | α-Galactosidase A | Fabry disease | 301500 |
| Post-translational processing defect of lysosomal enzymes | Multiple sulphatase deficiency | Multiple sulphatase deficiency | 272200 |
| Trafficking defect for lysosomal enzymes | N-acetylglucosamine-1-phosphotransferase | Mucolipidosis type II | 252500 |
| Defect in lysosomal enzyme protection | β-Galactosidase and Neuraminidase deficiency | Galactosialidosis | 256540 |
| Defect insoluble non-enzymatic lysosomal proteins | Hexosaminidase activator deficiency | GM2 type AB | 272750 |
| Transmembrane (non-enzyme) protein defect | Lysosomal-associated membrane protein 2 | Danon disease | 300257 |
| Unclassified | Intracellular accumulation of autofluorescent of lipopigments storage material | Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (CLN4) | 204300 |
Figure 1Male patient with Fabry disease (left, child) and a heterozygote for Fabry disease (right, mother). The male patient is 21 years old and presents pain in hands and achroparestesias, temperature intolerance, hypohidrosis, and proteinuria. He presents a 30delG in the α-GAL gene. The mother is 62 years old and has diabetes mellitus, cardiopathy and proteinuria. She is a carrier of 30delG in the α-GAL gene. Image use authorized by patients.
Figure 2Male patient with MPS II (left, child) and a heterozygote for MPS II (left, mother). The patient is 10 years old and presents severe mental handicap, coarse face, hepatosplenomeagly, dysostosis multiplex, joint contractures, obstructive airway disease, mitral regurgitation, deafness, and hydrocephaly. He presents a total deletion of the IDS gene. The mother is a MPS II carrier and is asymptomatic. Image use authorized by patient.
Comparison between Drosophila and humans regarding the compensation-dose mechanism (based on Dobyns et al., 2004 [48])
| Characteristics | Human | |
|---|---|---|
| Female | 6A+XX | 46, XX |
| Male | 6A+XY | 46, XY |
| Fertile | 6A+XX and 6A+XY | 46, XX and XY |
| Infertile | 6A+XO | 45, X |
| Dosage compensation in X chromosome | Transcribing rate of the X chromosome | X-inactivation |
| X- inactivation | No | Yes |
Relation between genic product properties, cellular selection, X-inactivation and phenotype of heterozygotes for X-linked diseases: the example of Fabry disease and MPS II (based on Dobyns et al., 2004 [48] and Dobyns, 2006 [53])
| Type of gene product | Positive cellular selection (gene product causing early cell death) | Clinical Phenotype in Heterozygotes | Probably X-inactivation Pattern | Disease |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell-autonomous | No | Normal | Random or skewed favorable to the normal allele | Fabry disease3 |
| No | Abnormal | Random or skewed unfavorable to the normal allele4 | Fabry disease3 | |
| Non-cell-autonomous1 or functionally non-autonomous2 | No | Normal | Random or skewed favorable to the normal allele | MPS II |
| No | Abnormal | Skewed favorable to the abnormal allele | MPS II |
1Non-autonomous gene products would include primarily secreted proteins; 2Functionally non-autonomous would include proteins expressed in non-clonal, multinucleated cells and small molecules that pass freely between cells; 3Athough the genic product of Fabry disease is non-cell autonomous, the hypothesis is that cross-correction capacity in this disease is low and, as a result, it is being classified in this table as cell-autonomous.4The phenotype can be modulated by the presence of a randomic X-inactivation, e.g., the phenotype is abnormal, and/or by an unfavourable skewed to the normal allele; then, a more severe phentoype is expected.