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Enzyme
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Query: EC:1.14.11.2 (
prolyl hydroxylase
)
1,814
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Collagen lysyl and
prolyl hydroxylase
activities were measured in cultured fibroblasts from a child with clinical features of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. Lysyl-to-
prolyl hydroxylase
activity ratios in cells from the proband, mother, father, and control were .24, .86, .52, and 1.00, respectively, providing a biochemical diagnosis of
Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type VI
and indicating an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance in this family. Prenatal assessment of lysyl hydroxylase deficiency was requested and accomplished for the first time during a subsequent pregnancy in the family. A series of control cultures established lysyl hydroxylase activity to be similar in cultured amniotic fluid cells (AF and F cells) and in cultured dermal fibroblasts. Cultured F and AF cells from the monitored pregnancy had enzyme activity similar to controls, indicating that the fetus should not be affected by lysyl hydroxylase deficiency. This finding was confirmed by demonstration of normal lysyl hydroxylase activity in fibroblasts cultured from the newborn baby. These studies show that cells cultured from second trimester amniotic fluid have collagen lysyl hydroxylase activity similar to that in dermal fibroblasts, making prenatal diagnosis of lysyl hydroxylase deficiency possible.
...
PMID:Genotyping and prenatal assessment of collagen lysyl hydroxylase deficiency in a family with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type VI. 608 51
Three variants of the
Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type VI
are described: a severe form with skeletal, dermal and ocular manifestations associated with a lack of hydroxylysine in skin and little lysyl hydroxylase activity in cultured fibroblasts; a similarly affected form with a nearly normal hydroxylsine content in skin, but with only little enzyme activity in cultured fibroblasts; and a predominantly ocular form with no biochemical abnormality in skin or cultured skin fibroblasts. The activities of
prolyl 4-hydroxylase
and the two hydroxylysyl glycosyltransferases were normal in all cases, and the failure to find lysyl hydroxylase activity was not due to altered solubility characteristics of the enzyme or to the presence of an enzyme inhibitor. The collagen produced in cell culture, however, was hydroxylated to a markedly higher extent than that found in skin. In both the mutant and control cells hydroxylation of lysyl residues was less sensitive to ascorbate deficiency than that of prolyl residues.
...
PMID:Biochemical characterization of variants of the Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type VI. 641 23
In the present study, we have isolated and sequenced the complementary DNAs of two mutant alleles for lysyl hydroxylase (LH) in fibroblasts from one patient (AT750) with
Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type VI
(
EDS VI
). We have identified a putative mutation in each allele which may be responsible for the patient's decreased LH (normalized to
prolyl hydroxylase
) activity (24% of normal). Intermediate levels of LH activity were measured in the patient's parents, who are clinically normal (father 52%; mother 86%). After the cloning of cDNAs and amplification by PCR, sequence analysis revealed two equally distributed populations of cDNAs for LH in the AT750 cell line. Each allele revealed different but significant changes from the normal sequence. In one allele (allele 1), the most striking change was a triple base deletion that would result in the loss of residue Glu532. The most significant difference in the other allele (allele 2) was a G-->A change which would produce a Gly678-->Arg codon change in a highly conserved region of the enzyme. Restriction analysis identified that allele 1 was inherited from the proband's mother and allele 2 from the father. This study represents the first example of compound heterozygosity for the LH gene in an
EDS VI
patient, and it appears that there is an additive effect of each mutant allele on clinical expression in this patient.
...
PMID:A patient with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type VI is a compound heterozygote for mutations in the lysyl hydroxylase gene. 816 71
We present clinical, radiological, biochemical, and genetic findings on six patients from two consanguineous families that show EDS-like features and radiological findings of a mild skeletal dysplasia. The EDS-like findings comprise hyperelastic, thin, and bruisable skin, hypermobility of the small joints with a tendency to contractures, protuberant eyes with bluish sclerae, hands with finely wrinkled palms, atrophy of the thenar muscles, and tapering fingers. The skeletal dysplasia comprises platyspondyly with moderate short stature, osteopenia, and widened metaphyses. Patients have an increased ratio of total urinary pyridinolines, lysyl pyridinoline/hydroxylysyl pyridinoline (LP/HP), of approximately 1 as opposed to approximately 6 in
EDS VI
or approximately 0.2 in controls. Lysyl and prolyl residues of collagens were underhydroxylated despite normal lysyl hydroxylase and
prolyl 4-hydroxylase
activities; underhydroxylation was a generalized process as shown by mass spectrometry of the alpha1(I)- and alpha2(I)-chain-derived peptides of collagen type I and involved at least collagen types I and II. A genome-wide SNP scan and sequence analyses identified in all patients a homozygous c.483_491 del9 SLC39A13 mutation that encodes for a membrane-bound zinc transporter SLC39A13. We hypothesize that an increased Zn(2+) content inside the endoplasmic reticulum competes with Fe(2+), a cofactor that is necessary for hydroxylation of lysyl and prolyl residues, and thus explains the biochemical findings. These data suggest an entity that we have designated "spondylocheiro dysplastic form of EDS (SCD-EDS)" to indicate a generalized skeletal dysplasia involving mainly the spine (spondylo) and striking clinical abnormalities of the hands (cheiro) in addition to the EDS-like features.
...
PMID:Spondylocheiro dysplastic form of the Ehlers-Danlos syndrome--an autosomal-recessive entity caused by mutations in the zinc transporter gene SLC39A13. 1851 83