| Literature DB >> 32466763 |
Tenghui Wu1,2, Fei Yin1,2, Shiqi Guang1,2, Fang He1,2, Li Yang1,2, Jing Peng3,4.
Abstract
Glycosylphosphatidylinositol biosynthesis defects cause rare genetic disorders characterised by developmental delay/intellectual disability, seizures, dysmorphic features, and diverse congenital anomalies associated with a wide range of additional features (hypotonia, hearing loss, elevated alkaline phosphatase, and several other features). Glycosylphosphatidylinositol functions as an anchor to link cell membranes and protein. These proteins function as enzymes, adhesion molecules, complement regulators, or co-receptors in signal transduction pathways. Biallelic variants involved in the glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchored proteins biosynthetic pathway are responsible for a growing number of disorders, including multiple congenital anomalies-hypotonia-seizures syndrome; hyperphosphatasia with mental retardation syndrome/Mabry syndrome; coloboma, congenital heart disease, ichthyosiform dermatosis, mental retardation, and ear anomalies/epilepsy syndrome; and early infantile epileptic encephalopathy-55. This review focuses on the current understanding of Glycosylphosphatidylinositol biosynthesis defects and the associated genes to further understand its wide phenotype spectrum.Entities:
Keywords: GPI-APs; PIG/PGAP genes; Phenotype
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32466763 PMCID: PMC7254680 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-020-01401-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1A scheme for the overall GPI-APs biosynthetic pathway, structural remodeling and transport. The whole biosynthetic steps can be divided into three parts: biosynthesis of GPI anchor, attachment of protein and GPI anchor, remodeling of GPI-APs. a) GPI anchor is synthesized in the ER from free PI through 11 steps [transfer of GlcNAc to PI, de-N-acetylation, acylation of the inositol ring, transfer of three mannoses, transfer of three ethanolamine phosphates, currently unknown: GlcN-PI flips from the cytoplasmic side to the luminal side, lipid structure changes from diacyl PI to a mixture of 1-alkyl, 2-acyl PI and diacyl PI in GlcN-(acyl) PI] which involves more than 17 genes, most of them are named PIG genes. The first two steps take place on the cytoplasmic side of the ER, whereas subsequent steps occur on the luminal side. b) The precursor proteins are synthesized independent of the GPI and processed by the GPI-transamidase complex encoded by five genes. c) Post-translational modification after attachment of protein and GPI anchor involving PGAP (post-GPI-attachment to proteins) genes, includes structural remodeling of the glycan and lipid portions of the GPI anchor, removing an acyl chain from the inositol and an EtN-P from Man-2. GPI-APs are then transported to the cell surface through the Golgi, where additional structural remodeling occurs, namely fatty acid
Comparison of clinical findings between different PIG/PGAP genes (PIGA, PIGL, PIGV, PIGM, PIGN, PIGO, PIGG, PIGT, PGAP1, PGAP2, PGAP3)
| Genes | Steps | Related diseases | Total number of patients | Median age at seizure onset | Median age at death | Number of deaths |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PIGA | 1 | MCAHS2 | 31 | 6 m | 2.78 m | 12 |
| PIGL | 2 | HPMRS5 | 17 | 5 m | 1y | 1 |
| PIGM | 6 | GPIBD1 | 7 | 3.75y | 5.5y | 2 |
| PIGV | 7 | HPMRS1 | 23 | 7 m | 10y | 1 |
| PIGN | 8 | MCAHS1 | 30 | 3 m | 19d | 18 |
| PIGO | 10 | HPMRS2 | 18 | 1.83y | 1.75y | 8 |
| PIGG | 11 | MRT53 | 7 | 4 m | – | 0 |
| PIGT | 12 | MCAHS3 | 13 | 5 m | 7y8m | 5 |
| PGAP2 | Remolding | HPMRS3 | 15 | 7y | – | 0 |
| PGAP3 | Remolding | HPMRS4 | 33 | 4y | – | 0 |
| PGAP1 | Remolding | GPIBD9 | 10 | 3 ma | – | 0 |
aOnly one patient’s onset age is available