| Literature DB >> 31835360 |
Muhammad Umair1, Majid Alfadhel1,2.
Abstract
Genetic disorders associated with metal metabolism form a large group of disorders and mostly result from defects in the proteins/enzymes involved in nutrient metabolism and energy production. These defects can affect different metabolic pathways and cause mild to severe disorders related to metal metabolism. Some disorders have moderate to severe clinical consequences. In severe cases, these elements accumulate in different tissues and organs, particularly the brain. As they are toxic and interfere with normal biological functions, the severity of the disorder increases. However, the human body requires a very small amount of these elements, and a deficiency of or increase in these elements can cause different genetic disorders to occur. Some of the metals discussed in the present review are copper, iron, manganese, zinc, and selenium. These elements may play a key role in the pathology and physiology of the nervous system.Entities:
Keywords: copper; genetic disorders; iron; manganese; metal metabolism; selenium; zinc
Year: 2019 PMID: 31835360 PMCID: PMC6952812 DOI: 10.3390/cells8121598
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Disorders that are due to an accumulation of manganese, copper, or iron and cause neurotoxicity.
| Disorders | Transition Metal | Inheritance | Gene | OMIM | Gene Function | Symptoms |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypermanganesemia with dystonia 1 | Manganese | Autosomal recessive |
| 613280 | Manganese transporter | Dystonia, cock-walk gait |
| Hypermanganesemia with dystonia 2 | Manganese | Autosomal recessive |
| 617013 | Manganese transporter | Progressive dystonia and bulbar dysfunction |
| Wilson’s disease | Copper | Autosomal recessive |
| 277900 | Copper transporter | Dysarthria, dysphagia, |
| Acaeruloplasminaemia, Cerebellar ataxia, Hypoceruloplasminemia | Iron | Autosomal recessive |
| 604290 | Ferroxidase | Chorea, ataxia, dystonia, |
| Neuroferritinopathy, Hyperferritinemia-cataract syndrome, L-ferritin deficiency | Iron | Autosomal dominant |
| 600886 | Iron storage | Chorea, dystonia |
| Spastic paraplegia type 35 | Iron | Autosomal recessive |
| 612319 | Fatty acid 2-hydroxylase | Gait difficulties with |
| Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation 1, HARP syndrome | Iron | Autosomal recessive |
| 607236 | Pantothenate kinase | Dystonia, rigidity, |
| Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation 6, Pontocerebellar hypoplasia type 12 | Iron | Autosomal recessive |
| 615643 | CoA synthesis | Dystonia, rigidity, |
| Infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy 1, Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation 2B, Parkinson’s disease type 14 | Iron | Autosomal recessive |
| 256600 | Phospholipase | Motor regression, hypotonia |
| Spastic paraplegia 43, Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation 4 | Iron | Autosomal recessive |
| 615043 | Mitochondrial | Spastic paraplegia, |
| Woodhouse–Sakati | Iron | Autosomal recessive |
| 241080 | Ubiquitinylation | Developmental delay |
| Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation type 5 | Iron | X-linked |
| 300894 | Autophagy | Global developmental |
| Kufor–Rakeb syndrome, Spastic paraplegia type 78 | Iron | Autosomal recessive |
| 606693 | Lysosomal divalent cation (transition metal) transporter | Atypical Parkinsonism |
Figure 1A schematic representation of zinc deficiency as compared to zinc intoxication.
Figure 2SLC39A family members (zinc/iron-regulated transporter-like protein (ZIP) transporters) and their role at the cellular level. Zn transporters belong to the SLC30A family. These cause different disorders in humans.
Figure 3Iron metabolism at the cellular level and its regulation. TfR: Transferrin receptor; IRE: Iron-responsive element; RME: Receptor-mediated endocytosis; E: Endosome; ISCM: Iron–sulphur cluster machinery; Ff: Transferrin; IRP: Iron-responsive protein; FeS: Iron–sulphur cluster; XS: Unknown sulphur transporter; CIAM: Cytosolic iron–sulphur cluster assembly machinery; PCBP: Poly (rC) binding protein.
Disorders associated with iron metabolism leading to hepcidin deficiency.
| S. No. | Gene | Inheritance | Protein | Role in Fe Metabolism | Anaemia | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
| Autosomal recessive | Hepcidin | Inhibits iron release | ----- | Not Available |
| 2 |
| Autosomal recessive | HFE | Regulates synthesis | ----- | Phlebotomy for ferritin |
| 3 |
| Autosomal recessive | Haemojuvelin | Regulates synthesis | ----- | Phlebotomy effective if |
| 4 |
| Autosomal recessive | Transferrin | Regulates synthesis | ----- | Phlebotomy |
| 5 |
| Autosomal dominant | Ferroportin (loss of function) | Export from cells into | Mild microcytic | Phlebotomy |
| Ferroportin (gain in hepcidin resistance) |
A list of genes involved in neurodegeneration with iron accumulation in the brain (NBIA).
| S. No. | Gene (OMIM) | Inheritance | Protein | Disorder (OMIM) | Role in Fe Metabolism | Other | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
| Autosomal recessive | DMT1 | Anemia, hypochromic microcytics with iron overload 1 (206,100) | Duodenal uptake Intracellular release | Increased Cu in brain associated with | Erythropoietin |
| 2 |
| Autosomal recessive | Matriptase 2 | Iron-refractory, iron deficiency anemia (206,200) | Mutations lead to high hepcidin levels | ----- | ----- |
| 3 |
| Autosomal dominant | STEAP3 | Anemia, hypochromic microcytics with iron overload 2 (615,234) | For cytoplasmic uptake endosomal ferrireductase is required | Hepatosplenomegaly | Transfusion |
| 4 |
| Autosomal recessive | Transferrin | Immunodeficiency 46 (616,740) | Cellular uptake | Combined immunodeficiency | ----- |
| 5 |
| Autosomal recessive | Transferrin | Atransferrinemia (209,300) | Fe transport in blood, uptake | Growth retardation (TF < 20 mg/dL) | Plasma |
The copper balance in the body [4,44,45].
| S. No. | Copper Amount | Wilson Disease | Normal | Menkes Disease |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Copper dietary intake (mg/day) | 5 | 5 | 5 |
| 2 | Copper intestinal absorption (mg/day) | 2 | 2 | 0.1–0.2 |
| 3 | Copper biliary excretion (mg/day) | 0.2–0.4 | 2 | ------ |
| 4 | Copper urinary excretion (ug/day) | 100–1000 | 15–60 | increased |
| 5 | Copper balance | Positive | 0 | Negative |
| 6 | Serum copper (mg/L) | 0.19–0.63 | 0.75–1.45 | <0.70 |
| 7 | Serum ceruloplasmin (mg/L) | 0–200 | 180–360 | <50 |
| 8 | Liver copper (ug/g dry weight) | 200–3000 | 70–140 | 10–20 |
| 9 | Duodenal copper (ug/g dry weight) | ------ | 7–29 | 50–80 |
List of enzymes containing copper.
| S. No. | Enzyme | Function | Deficiency |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sulfhydryl oxidase | Cross-linking of keratin | Pili torti |
| 2 | Diamine oxidases | Degrade histamine | Histamine response increased |
| 3 | Superoxide dismutase | Free radical detoxification | Protection against oxygen |
| 4 | Peptidylglycine-aminating | Removes carboxy-terminal glycine to | Reduced activity of gastrin, |
| 5 | Lysyl oxidase | Cross-linking of collagen and elastin | Arterial abnormalities; bladder |
| 6 | Dopamine-β-hydroxylase | Dopamine production in neurons Catecholamine production | Reduced number of neurotransmitters, Neurologic effects; temperature instability; pupillary constriction |
| 7 | Tyrosinase | Melanin production in skin | Reduced pigmentation |
| 8 | Cytochrome c oxidase | Electron transport chain | Decreased energy in muscle and neurons; |
| 9 | Ascorbate oxidase | Dehydroascorbate production | Skeletal demineralization |
| 10 | Ceruloplasmin | Fe (II)/Fe (III) oxidation and may be involved in lipid peroxidation | Aceruloplasminemia, Cerebellar ataxia, Hemosiderosis |
| 11 | Hephaestin | Intestinal iron efflux | Hemochromatosis Type 1 Deficiency, Anemia |
| 12 | Zyklopen | Placental iron efflux | Abnormal hair, joint laxity, and developmental delay |
Enzymes that require manganese for proper function [4].
| S. No. | Enzyme | Function |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Prolidase | Collagen recycling (Enzyme capable of degrading dipeptides) |
| 2 | Arginase | Krebs-Henseleit urea cycle (Final enzyme of the urea cycle) |
| 3 | Superoxide dismutase | Antioxidant (An enzyme that alternately catalyzes the dismutation of the superoxide radical into either ordinary molecular oxygen or hydrogen peroxide) |
| 4 | Glycosyl tranferases | Glycosaminoglycan synthesis (Enzymes that establish natural glycosidic linkages) |
| 5 | Glutamine synthetase | Glutamine synthesis (Plays an essential role in the metabolism of nitrogen by catalyzing the condensation of glutamate and ammonia to form glutamine) |
| 6 | Isocitrate dehydrogenase | Krebs cycle (Catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of isocitrate, producing alpha-ketoglutarate and CO₂) |
| 7 | Pyruvate carboxylase | Gluconeogenesis (It catalyzes the physiologically irreversible carboxylation of pyruvate to form oxaloacetate) |
| 8 | Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase | Gluconeogenesis (It converts oxaloacetate into phosphoenolpyruvate and carbon dioxide) |
Mammalian selenoproteins and their function [107,110,111].
| Mammalian Selenoproteins | Functions |
|---|---|
| 15 kDa selenoprotein (Sep15) | Regulated by ER stress, interacts with the UDP-glucose glycoprotein glucosyltransferase and is potentially involved in glycoprotein folding |
| Thyroid hormone deiodinase 1 | Removes iodine from the outer ring of T4 to produce plasma T3 and catalyzes deiodination and thus inactivation of T3 |
| Thyroid hormone deiodinase 2 | Converts T4 to T3 locally in tissues |
| Thyroid hormone deiodinase 3 | Catalyzes deiodination of T4 to T3 in peripheral |
| Glutathione peroxidase (GPx) 1–4, 6 | GSH-dependent detoxification of H2O2 |
| Selenoprotein H | Nuclear redox control, protects cells from H2O2, increases mitochondrial biogenesis and CytC production |
| Selenoprotein I | Unknown function |
| Selenoprotein R (SEPX, MSRB1) | Methionine sulfoxide reductase |
| Selenoproteins K | Modulates Ca2+ influx that affects immune cells |
| Selenoproteins M | Protects neurons from oxidative stress |
| Selenoproteins N, | Expressed in skeletal muscle, heart, lung, and |
| Selenoproteins, O | Unknown function |
| Selenoproteins, T | Cellular calcium handling, redox regulation, plays a role in cell adhesion |
| Selenoprotein, P (SelP) | Se transport to peripheral tissues and an antioxidant function |
| Selenoprotein, R | Reduces methionine-R-sulfoxide residues in proteins to methionine |
| Selenoproteins, S | Upregulated upon treatment with pro-inflammatory cytokines and glucose deprivation |
| Selenophosphate synthetase 2 (SPS2) | Selenocysteine biosynthesis |
| Selenoprotein P (SePP) | Se transport |
| Deiodinase (DIO) 1–3 | Thyroid hormone metabolism |
| Thioredoxin reductase 1 | Reduces the oxidized form of cytosolic thioredoxin |
| Thioredoxi | Catalyzes a variety of reactions, specific for |
| Thioredoxin reductase 3 | Reduces the oxidized form of mitochondrial |
| Selenoprotein, V | Unknown function and expressed in spermatids |
| Selenoprotein W | Unknown function and expressed in skeletal muscle and other tissues |