| Literature DB >> 33792664 |
Denisa Hathazi1,2, Dan Cox3, Adele D'Amico4, Giorgio Tasca5, Richard Charlton3, Robert-Yves Carlier6,7, Jennifer Baumann1, Laxmikanth Kollipara1, René P Zahedi1,8, Ingo Feldmann1, Jean-Francois Deleuze9, Annalaura Torella10,11, Ronald Cohn12, Emily Robinson13, Francesco Ricci13, Heinz Jungbluth14, Fabiana Fattori4, Anne Boland9, Emily O'Connor15, Rita Horvath2, Rita Barresi3, Hanns Lochmüller15,16, Andoni Urtizberea17, Marie-Line Jacquemont18, Isabelle Nelson19, Laura Swan13, Gisèle Bonne19, Andreas Roos15,20.
Abstract
Marinesco-Sjögren syndrome is a rare human disorder caused by biallelic mutations in SIL1 characterized by cataracts in infancy, myopathy and ataxia, symptoms which are also associated with a novel disorder caused by mutations in INPP5K. While these phenotypic similarities may suggest commonalties at a molecular level, an overlapping pathomechanism has not been established yet. In this study, we present six new INPP5K patients and expand the current mutational and phenotypical spectrum of the disease showing the clinical overlap between Marinesco-Sjögren syndrome and the INPP5K phenotype. We applied unbiased proteomic profiling on cells derived from Marinesco-Sjögren syndrome and INPP5K patients and identified alterations in d-3-PHGDH as a common molecular feature. d-3-PHGDH modulates the production of l-serine and mutations in this enzyme were previously associated with a neurological phenotype, which clinically overlaps with Marinesco-Sjögren syndrome and INPP5K disease. As l-serine administration represents a promising therapeutic strategy for d-3-PHGDH patients, we tested the effect of l-serine in generated sil1, phgdh and inpp5k a+b zebrafish models, which showed an improvement in their neuronal phenotype. Thus, our study defines a core phenotypical feature underpinning a key common molecular mechanism in three rare diseases and reveals a common and novel therapeutic target for these patients.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 l-serine; BiP; INPP5K; PHGDH; SIL1
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33792664 PMCID: PMC8418339 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awab133
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain ISSN: 0006-8950 Impact factor: 13.501