Literature DB >> 25460580

Lack of prolidase causes a bone phenotype both in human and in mouse.

Roberta Besio1, Silvia Maruelli1, Roberta Gioia1, Isabella Villa2, Peter Grabowski3, Orla Gallagher3, Nicholas J Bishop3, Sarah Foster3, Ersilia De Lorenzi4, Raffaella Colombo4, Josè Luis Dapena Diaz5, Haether Moore-Barton6, Charu Deshpande6, Halil Ibrahim Aydin7, Aysegul Tokatli8, Bartlomiej Kwiek9, Cigdem Seher Kasapkara10, Esra Ozsoy Adisen10, Mehmet Ali Gurer10, Maja Di Rocco11, James M Phang12, Teresa M Gunn13, Ruggero Tenni1, Antonio Rossi1, Antonella Forlino14.   

Abstract

The degradation of the main fibrillar collagens, collagens I and II, is a crucial process for skeletal development. The most abundant dipeptides generated from the catabolism of collagens contain proline and hydroxyproline. In humans, prolidase is the only enzyme able to hydrolyze dipeptides containing these amino acids at their C-terminal end, thus being a key player in collagen synthesis and turnover. Mutations in the prolidase gene cause prolidase deficiency (PD), a rare recessive disorder. Here we describe 12 PD patients, 9 of whom were molecularly characterized in this study. Following a retrospective analysis of all of them a skeletal phenotype associated with short stature, hypertelorism, nose abnormalities, microcephaly, osteopenia and genu valgum, independent of both the type of mutation and the presence of the mutant protein was identified. In order to understand the molecular basis of the bone phenotype associated with PD, we analyzed a recently identified mouse model for the disease, the dark-like (dal) mutant. The dal/dal mice showed a short snout, they were smaller than controls, their femurs were significantly shorter and pQCT and μCT analyses of long bones revealed compromised bone properties at the cortical and at the trabecular level in both male and female animals. The differences were more pronounce at 1 month being the most parameters normalized by 2 months of age. A delay in the formation of the second ossification center was evident at postnatal day 10. Our work reveals that reduced bone growth was due to impaired chondrocyte proliferation and increased apoptosis rate in the proliferative zone associated with reduced hyperthrophic zone height. These data suggest that lack of prolidase, a cytosolic enzyme involved in the final stage of protein catabolism, is required for normal skeletogenesis especially at early age when the requirement for collagen synthesis and degradation is the highest.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bone phenotype; Collagen; Growth plate; Prolidase; Prolidase deficiency

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25460580     DOI: 10.1016/j.bone.2014.11.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bone        ISSN: 1873-2763            Impact factor:   4.398


  6 in total

1.  Prolidase Deficiency in a Mexican-American Patient Identified by Array CGH Reveals a Novel and the Largest PEPD Gene Deletion.

Authors:  Jonathan P Hintze; Amelia Kirby; Erin Torti; Jacqueline R Batanian
Journal:  Mol Syndromol       Date:  2016-04-14

Review 2.  Clinical Genetics of Prolidase Deficiency: An Updated Review.

Authors:  Marta Spodenkiewicz; Michel Spodenkiewicz; Maureen Cleary; Marie Massier; Giorgos Fitsialos; Vincent Cottin; Guillaume Jouret; Céline Poirsier; Martine Doco-Fenzy; Anne-Sophie Lèbre
Journal:  Biology (Basel)       Date:  2020-05-21

3.  Prolidase deficiency, a rare inborn error of immunity, clinical phenotypes, immunological features, and proposed treatments in twins.

Authors:  Nora Alrumayyan; Drew Slauenwhite; Sarah M McAlpine; Sarah Roberts; Thomas B Issekutz; Adam M Huber; Zaiping Liu; Beata Derfalvi
Journal:  Allergy Asthma Clin Immunol       Date:  2022-02-23       Impact factor: 3.406

4.  Quantitative analysis of the natural history of prolidase deficiency: description of 17 families and systematic review of published cases.

Authors:  Francis Rossignol; Marvid S Duarte Moreno; Carlos R Ferreira; Manuel Schiff; Jean-François Benoist; Manfred Boehm; Emmanuelle Bourrat; Aline Cano; Brigitte Chabrol; Claudine Cosson; José Luís Dapena Díaz; Arthur D'Harlingue; David Dimmock; Alexandra F Freeman; María Tallón García; Cheryl Garganta; Tobias Goerge; Sara S Halbach; Jan de Laffolie; Christina T Lam; Ludovic Martin; Esmeralda Martins; Andrea Meinhardt; Isabelle Melki; Amanda K Ombrello; Noémie Pérez; Dulce Quelhas; Anna Scott; Anne M Slavotinek; Ana Rita Soares; Sarah L Stein; Kira Süßmuth; Jenny Thies
Journal:  Genet Med       Date:  2021-05-26       Impact factor: 8.822

Review 5.  Understanding the Role of Estrogen Receptor Status in PRODH/POX-Dependent Apoptosis/Survival in Breast Cancer Cells.

Authors:  Sylwia Lewoniewska; Ilona Oscilowska; Antonella Forlino; Jerzy Palka
Journal:  Biology (Basel)       Date:  2021-12-10

6.  A big-data approach to understanding metabolic rate and response to obesity in laboratory mice.

Authors:  June K Corrigan; Deepti Ramachandran; Yuchen He; Colin J Palmer; Michael J Jurczak; Rui Chen; Bingshan Li; Randall H Friedline; Jason K Kim; Jon J Ramsey; Louise Lantier; Owen P McGuinness; Alexander S Banks
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2020-05-01       Impact factor: 8.713

  6 in total

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