| Literature DB >> 21504867 |
Mirella Filocamo1, Amelia Morrone.
Abstract
Lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs) are a large group of more than 50 different inherited metabolic diseases which, in the great majority of cases, result from the defective function of specific lysosomal enzymes and, in few cases, of non-enzymatic lysosomal proteins or non-lysosomal proteins involved in lysosomal biogenesis. The progressive lysosomal accumulation of undegraded metabolites results in generalised cell and tissue dysfunction, and, therefore, multi-systemic pathology. Storage may begin during early embryonic development, and the clinical presentation for LSDs can vary from an early and severe phenotype to late-onset mild disease. The diagnosis of most LSDs--after accurate clinical/paraclinical evaluation, including the analysis of some urinary metabolites--is based mainly on the detection of a specific enzymatic deficiency. In these cases, molecular genetic testing (MGT) can refine the enzymatic diagnosis. Once the genotype of an individual LSD patient has been ascertained, genetic counselling should include prediction of the possible phenotype and the identification of carriers in the family at risk. MGT is essential for the identification of genetic disorders resulting from non-enzymatic lysosomal protein defects and is complementary to biochemical genetic testing (BGT) in complex situations, such as in cases of enzymatic pseudodeficiencies. Prenatal diagnosis is performed on the most appropriate samples, which include fresh or cultured chorionic villus sampling or cultured amniotic fluid. The choice of the test--enzymatic and/or molecular--is based on the characteristics of the defect to be investigated. For prenatal MGT, the genotype of the family index case must be known. The availability of both tests, enzymatic and molecular, enormously increases the reliability of the entire prenatal diagnostic procedure. To conclude, BGT and MGT are mostly complementary for post- and prenatal diagnosis of LSDs. Whenever genotype/phenotype correlations are available, they can be helpful in prognosis and in making decisions about therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21504867 PMCID: PMC3500170 DOI: 10.1186/1479-7364-5-3-156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genomics ISSN: 1473-9542 Impact factor: 4.639
Lysosomal storage disorders
| OMIM | Disease | Defective protein | Main storage | Preliminary | Gene | MIM | Diagnostic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 607014 | MPS I (Hurler, Scheie, | α-Iduronidase | Dermatan sulphate, | GAGs (U) | 252800 | BGT, MGT | |
| 309900 | MPS II (Hunter) | Iduronate sulphatase | Dermatan sulphate, | GAGs (U) | 309900 | BGT, MGT | |
| 252900 | MPS III A (Sanfilippo A) | Heparan sulphamidase | Heparan sulphate | GAGs (U) | 605270 | BGT, MGT | |
| 252920 | MPS III B (Sanfilippo B) | Acetyl α-glucosaminidase | Heparan sulphate | GAGs (U) | 609701 | BGT, MGT | |
| 252930 | MPS III C (Sanfilippo C) | Acetyl CoA: α-glucosaminide | Heparan sulphate | GAGs (U) | 610453 | BGT, MGT | |
| 252940 | MPS III D (Sanfilippo D) | N-acetyl | Heparan sulphate | GAGs (U) | 607664 | BGT, MGT | |
| 253000 | MPS IVA (Morquio A) | Acetyl | Keratan sulphate, | GAGs (U) | 612222 | BGT, MGT | |
| 253010 | MPS IV B (Morquio B) | β-Galactosidase | Keratan sulphate | GAGs (U) | 611458 | BGT, MGT | |
| 253200 | MPS VI | Acetyl galactosamine | Dermatan sulphate | GAGs (U) | 611542 | BGT, MGT | |
| 253220 | MPS VII (Sly) | β-Glucuronidase | Dermatan sulphate, | GAGs (U) | 611499 | BGT, MGT | |
| 601492 | MPS IX (Natowicz) | Hyaluronidase | Hyluronan | - | 607071 | BGT, MGT | |
| 301500 | Fabry | α-Galactosidase A | Globotriasylceramide | - | 300644 | BGT, MGT | |
| 228000 | Farber | Acid ceramidase | Ceramide | - | 613468 | BGT, MGT | |
| 230500 230600 | Gangliosidosis GM1 | GM1-β-galactosidase | GM1 ganglioside, | Oligos (U) | 611458 | BGT, MGT | |
| 272800 | Gangliosidosis GM2, | β-Hexosaminidase A | GM2 ganglioside, | - | 606869 | BGT, MGT | |
| 268800 | Gangliosidosis GM2, | β-Hexosaminidase A + B | GM2 ganglioside, | - | 606873 | BGT, MGT | |
| 230800 | Gaucher | Glucosylceramidase | Glucosylceramide | Chito+(S) | 606463 | BGT, MGT | |
| 245200 | Krabbe | β-Galactosylceramidase | Galactosylceramide | - | 606890 | BGT, MGT | |
| 250100 | Metachromatic | Arylsulphatase A | Sulphatides | Sulphatides | 607574 | BGT, MGT | |
| 257200 607616 | Niemann-Pick | Sphingomyelinase | Sphingomyelin | - | 607608 | BGT, MGT | |
| 208400 | Aspartylglicosaminuria | Glycosylasparaginase | Aspartylglucosamine | Oligos (U) | 613228 | BGT, MGT | |
| 230000 | Fucosidosis | α-Fucosidase | Glycoproteins, | Oligos (U) | 612280 | BGT, MGT | |
| 248500 | α-Mannosidosis | α-Mannosidase | Mannose-rich oligos | Oligos (U) | 609458 | BGT, MGT | |
| 248510 | β-Mannosidosis | β-Mannosidase | Man(β1 → 4)GlnNAc | Oligos (U) | 609489 | BGT, MGT | |
| 609241 | Schindler | N-acetylgalactosaminidase | Sialylated/ | Oligos (U) | 104170 | BGT, MGT | |
| 256550 | Sialidosis | Neuraminidase | Oligos, glycopeptides | Bound SA (U), | 608272 | BGT, MGT | |
| 232300 | Glycogenosis II/Pompe | α1,4-glucosidase (acid maltase) | Glycogen | CK (S) | 606800 | BGT, MGT | |
| 278000 | Wolman/CESD | Acid lipase | Cholesterol esters | - | 613497 | BGT, MGT | |
| 272750 | Gangliosidosis GM2, | GM2 activator protein | GM2 ganglioside, | - | 613109 | MGT | |
| 249900 | Metachromatic | Saposin B | Sulphatides | Sulphatides | 176801 | MGT | |
| 611722 | Krabbe | Saposin A | Galactosylceramide | - | 176801 | MGT | |
| 610539 | Gaucher | Saposin C | Glucosylceramide | - | 176801 | MGT | |
| Transporters | |||||||
| 269920 | Sialic acid storage | Sialin | Sialic acid | Free SA (U) | 604322 | MGT | |
| 219800 | Cystinosis | Cystinosin | Cystine | - | 606272 | MGT | |
| 257220 | Niemann-Pick Type C1 | Niemann-Pick type 1 (NPC1) | Cholesterol and | Chito+(S) | 607623 | Filipin test, | |
| 607625 | Niemann-Pick, Type C2 | Niemann-Pick type 2 (NPC2) | Cholesterol and | Chito+(S) | 601015 | Filipin test, | |
| Structural Proteins | |||||||
| 300257 | Danon | Lysosome-associated | Cytoplasmatic debris | - | 309060 | MGT | |
| 252650 | Mucolipidosis IV | Mucolipin | Lipids | - | 605248 | MGT | |
| 256540 | Galactosialidosis | Protective protein cathepsin A | Sialyloligosaccharides | Bound SA (U), | 613111 | BGTa, MGT | |
| 272200 | Multiple sulphatase | Multiple sulphatase | Sulphatides, | Sulphatides (U), | 607939 | BGTb, MGT | |
| 252500 | Mucolipidosis IIα/β, | GlcNAc-1-P transferase | Oligos, GAGs, lipids | Oligos (U) | 607840 | BGTc, MGT | |
| 232605 | Mucolipidosis III | GlcNAc-1-P transferase | Oligos, GAGs, lipids | Oligos (U) | 607838 | BGTc, MGT | |
| 265800 | Pycnodysostosis | Cathepsin K | Bone proteins | X-ray | 601105 | MGT | |
| 256730 | NCL 1 | Palmitoyl protein thioesterase | Saposins A and D | Ultrastructure | 600722 | BGT, MGT | |
| 204500 | NCL 2 | Tripeptidyl peptidase 1 (TPP1) | Subunit c of ATP | Ultrastructure | 607998 | BGT, MGT | |
| 204200 | NCL 3 | CLN3, lysosomal | Subunit c of ATP | Ultrastructure | 607042 | MGT | |
| 256731 | NCL 5 | CLN5, soluble lysosomal | Subunit c of ATP | Ultrastructure | 608102 | MGT | |
| 601780 | NCL 6 | CLN6, transmembrane protein | Subunit c of ATP | Ultrastructure | 606725 | MGT | |
| 610951 | NCL 7 | CLC7, lysosomal chloride | Subunit c of ATP | Ultrastructure | 611124 | MGT | |
| 600143 | NCL 8 | CLN8, transmembrane protein | Subunit c of ATP | Ultrastructure | 607837 | MGT | |
| 610127 | NCL 10 | Cathepsin D | Saposins A and D | Ultrastructure | 116840 | MGT |
Abbreviations: CK, creatine kinase; CLN, with expansion; GAGs, glysosaminoglycans; GLcNAc-1-P, with expansion; Oligos, oligosaccharides; S, serum; SA, sialic acid; U, urine; Chito, chitotriosidase
aDefect of β-galactosidase and neuraminidase and/or cathepsin A
bDecrease in some lysosomal and non-lysosomal sulphatases
cSome lysosomal hydrolase activities increased in plasma and decreased in cultured fibroblasts
†Note that 5-7 per cent of the population have a recessively inherited defect in the chitotriosidase gene, which leads to false-negative values [11].
Figure 1Simplified scheme of M6P-dependent enzymes sorting to the lysosome. The enzyme UDP-N-acetylglucosamine-1-phosphotransferase, responsible for the initial step in the synthesis of the M6P recognition markers, plays a key role in lysosomal enzyme trafficking. Loss of this activity results in mucolipidoses II/III. Note that not all lysosomal enzymes depend on the M6P pathway.