Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (
beta-galactosidase
)
14,648
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The molecular form and subcellular distribution of acid
beta-galactosidase
in cultured fibroblasts from patients with
beta-galactosidase
deficiency (GM1-gangliosidosis,
Morquio
B disease and galactosialidosis) were studied, using antibodies against three different forms of the human enzyme: a high-molecular-weight multienzymic complex, a recombinant 84-kDa precursor, and a 64-kDa tryptic product of the precursor. The mature enzyme from normal fibroblasts was immunoprecipitated by the anti-complex and anti-64-kDa protein antibodies, but not by the anti-84-kDa precursor one. immunofluorescence staining of normal fibroblasts revealed the granular (lysosomal) distribution with anti-64-kDa protein antibody and the perinuclear reticular distribution with anti-84-kDa precursor antibody, probably representing the Golgi apparatus. Both patterns were demonstrated in
Morquio
B disease, but the residual enzyme activity was exclusively due to the mature enzyme. In Type 1 galactosialidosis, most of the expressed enzyme was detected as the precursor form with a perinuclear reticular distribution. In type 2 galactosialidosis, more than half of the enzyme activity was due to the mature form with a lysosomal distribution. Fibroblasts from a patient with GM1 gangliosidosis, expressing no
beta-galactosidase
mRNA, did not react against either anti-64-kDa protein antibody or anti-84-kDa precursor antibody. The combined use of immunoprecipitation and immunostaining was useful for analysing the pathophysiology of the intracellular processing and transport of the mutant
beta-galactosidase
.
...
PMID:Molecular form and subcellular distribution of acid beta-galactosidase in fibroblasts from patients with GM1 gangliosidosis, Morquio B disease and galactosialidosis. 910 59
GM1 gangliosidosis and
Morquio
B disease are distinct disorders both clinically and biochemically yet they arise from the same
beta-galactosidase
enzyme deficiency. On the other hand, galactosialidosis and sialidosis share common clinical and biochemical features, yet they arise from two separate enzyme deficiencies, namely, protective protein/cathepsin A and neuraminidase, respectively. However distinct, in practice these disorders overlap both clinically and biochemically so that easy discrimination between them is sometimes difficult. The principle reason for this may be found in the fact that these three enzymes form a unique complex in lysosomes that is required for their stability and posttranslational processing. In this review, I focus mainly on the primary and secondary
beta-galactosidase
deficiency states and offer some hypotheses to account for differences between GM1 gangliosidosis and
Morquio
B disease.
...
PMID:Molecular basis of GM1 gangliosidosis and Morquio disease, type B. Structure-function studies of lysosomal beta-galactosidase and the non-lysosomal beta-galactosidase-like protein. 1057 Oct 6
Lysosomal beta-D-galactosidase (beta-gal), the enzyme deficient in the autosomal recessive disorders G(M1) gangliosidosis and
Morquio
B, is synthesized as an 85-kDa precursor that is C-terminally processed into a 64-66-kDa mature form. The released approximately 20-kDa proteolytic fragment was thought to be degraded. We now present evidence that it remains associated to the 64-kDa chain after partial proteolysis of the precursor. This polypeptide was found to copurify with beta-gal and protective protein/cathepsin A from mouse liver and Madin-Darby bovine kidney cells and was immunoprecipitated from human fibroblasts but not from fibroblasts of a G(M1) gangliosidosis and a galactosialidosis patient. Uptake of wild-type protective protein/cathepsin A by galactosialidosis fibroblasts resulted in a significant increase of mature and active beta-gal and its C-terminal fragment. Expression in COS-1 cells of mutant cDNAs encoding either the N-terminal or the C-terminal domain of beta-gal resulted in the synthesis of correctly sized polypeptides without catalytic activity. Only when co-expressed, the two subunits associate and become catalytically active. Our results suggest that the C terminus of beta-gal is an essential domain of the catalytically active enzyme and provide evidence that lysosomal
beta-galactosidase
is a two-subunit molecule. These data may give new significance to mutations in G(M1) gangliosidosis patients found in the C-terminal part of the molecule.
...
PMID:Processing of lysosomal beta-galactosidase. The C-terminal precursor fragment is an essential domain of the mature enzyme. 1074 81
Mutations in the lysosomal acid beta-galactosidase (
EC 3.2.1.23
) underlie two different disorders: GM1 gangliosidosis, which involves the nervous system and visceral organs to varying extents, and
Morquio's syndrome
type B (
Morquio
B disease), which is a skeletal-connective tissue disease without any CNS symptoms. This article shows that transduction of human GM1 gangliosidosis fibroblasts with retrovirus vectors encoding the human acid
beta-galactosidase
cDNA leads to complete correction of the enzymatic deficiency. The newly synthesized enzyme is correctly processed and targeted to the lysosomes in transduced cells. Cross-correction experiments using retrovirus-modified cells as enzyme donors showed, however, that the human enzyme is transferred at low efficiencies. Experiments using a different retrovirus vector carrying the human cDNA confirmed this observation. Transduction of human GM1 fibroblasts and mouse NIH 3T3 cells with a retrovirus vector encoding the mouse
beta-galactosidase
cDNA resulted in high levels of enzymatic activity. Furthermore, the mouse enzyme was found to be transferred to human cells at high efficiency. Enzyme activity measurements in medium conditioned by genetically modified cells suggest that the human
beta-galactosidase
enzyme is less efficiently released to the extracellular space than its mouse counterpart. This study suggests that lysosomal enzymes, contrary to the generalized perception in the field of gene therapy, may differ significantly in their properties and provides insights for design of future gene therapy interventions in acid
beta-galactosidase
deficiency.
...
PMID:Correction of acid beta-galactosidase deficiency in GM1 gangliosidosis human fibroblasts by retrovirus vector-mediated gene transfer: higher efficiency of release and cross-correction by the murine enzyme. 1075 51
We have previously shown that intracellular trafficking and extracellular assembly of tropoelastin into elastic fibers is facilitated by the 67-kD elastin-binding protein identical to an enzymatically inactive, alternatively spliced variant of
beta-galactosidase
(S-Gal). In the present study, we investigated elastic-fiber assembly in cultures of dermal fibroblasts from patients with either
Morquio
B disease or GM1-gangliosidosis who bore different mutations of the
beta-galactosidase
gene. We found that fibroblasts taken from patients with an adult form of GM1-gangliosidosis and from patients with an infantile form, carrying a missense mutations in the
beta-galactosidase
gene-mutations that caused deficiency in lysosomal
beta-galactosidase
but not in S-Gal-assembled normal elastic fibers. In contrast, fibroblasts from two cases of infantile GM1-gangliosidosis that bear nonsense mutations of the
beta-galactosidase
gene, as well as fibroblasts from four patients with
Morquio
B who had mutations causing deficiency in both forms of
beta-galactosidase
, did not assemble elastic fibers. We also demonstrated that S-Gal-deficient fibroblasts from patients with either GM1-gangliosidosis or
Morquio
B can acquire the S-Gal protein, produced by coculturing of Chinese hamster ovary cells permanently transected with S-Gal cDNA, resulting in improved deposition of elastic fibers. The present study provides a novel and natural model validating functional roles of S-Gal in elastogenesis and elucidates an association between impaired elastogenesis and the development of connective-tissue disorders in patients with
Morquio
B disease and in patients with an infantile form of GM1-gangliosidosis.
...
PMID:Impaired elastic-fiber assembly by fibroblasts from patients with either Morquio B disease or infantile GM1-gangliosidosis is linked to deficiency in the 67-kD spliced variant of beta-galactosidase. 1084 12
Ten low molecular compounds analogous to galactose were screened for inhibition of human
beta-galactosidase
activity. Among them, 1-deoxy-galactonojirimycin and N-(n-butyl)-deoxy-galactonojirimycin showed an inhibitory effect at high concentrations. However, they restored mutant enzyme activities expressed in enzyme-deficient knockout mouse fibroblasts and human beta-galactosidosis fibroblasts at lower intracellular concentrations. This effect was more remarkable on G(M1)-gangliosidosis mutations (R201C, I51T, R201H, R457Q) than
Morquio
B disease mutations (W273L, Y83H). These low molecular compounds pass though the blood-brain barrier in mice. We hope that this new therapeutic approach will become clinically applicable in the near future.
...
PMID:Galactonojirimycin derivatives restore mutant human beta-galactosidase activities expressed in fibroblasts from enzyme-deficient knockout mouse. 1150 97
An inherited deficiency in
beta-galactosidase
can result in GM1 gangliosidosis, with several phenotypes of generalized or chronic psychomotor deterioration, as well as in
Morquio disease
type B, a characteristic mucopolysaccharidosis free of neurological symptoms. We performed mutation analyses in 17 juvenile and adult patients from various European regions with a deficiency in
beta-galactosidase
and skeletal abnormalities. Fifteen of these had the
Morquio
B phenotype and have remained neurologically healthy until now while the two others exhibited psychomotor retardation of juvenile onset. A two-base substitution (851-852TG-->CT; W273L) was present in 14 of the 15
Morquio
B cases. Even if one excludes alleles from patients with possible common descent, there was a much higher frequency (79%) among those with
Morquio
B phenotype for the W273L mutation than previously reported in the literature (37%). That the
Morquio
phenotype is also expressed in heterozygotes for W273L and alleles typically found in GM1 gangliosidosis makes it possible to predict the phenotype and reliably detect heterozygotes. A single French patient had a novel missense point mutation (Q408P) together with a known mutation (T500A) while the mentally retarded patients were both heterozygous for two mutations known in chronic GM1 gangliosidosis together with two novel missense point mutations (Y270D and H281Y) in the vicinity of W273L. Our results confirm the high impact of Trp 273 for the function of
beta-galactosidase
and the expression of the
Morquio
B phenotype. In addition, a second domain around the amino acids 400-500 may also be of significance.
...
PMID:Mutation analyses in 17 patients with deficiency in acid beta-galactosidase: three novel point mutations and high correlation of mutation W273L with Morquio disease type B. 1151 21
Lysosomal enzymes sialidase (alpha-neuraminidase),
beta-galactosidase
, and N-acetylaminogalacto-6-sulfate sulfatase are involved in the catabolism of glycolipids, glycoproteins, and oligosaccharides. Their functional activity in the cell depends on their association in a multienzyme complex with lysosomal carboxypeptidase, cathepsin A. We review the data suggesting that the integrity of the complex plays a crucial role at different stages of biogenesis of lysosomal enzymes, including intracellular sorting and proteolytic processing of their precursors. The complex plays a protective role for all components, extending their half-life in the lysosome from several hours to several days; and for sialidase, the association with cathepsin A is also necessary for the expression of enzymatic activity. The disintegration of the complex due to genetic mutations in its components results in their functional deficiency and causes severe metabolic disorders: sialidosis (mutations in sialidase), GM1-gangliosidosis and
Morquio disease
type B (mutations in
beta-galactosidase
), galactosialidosis (mutations in cathepsin A), and
Morquio disease
type A (mutations in N-acetylaminogalacto-6-sulfate sulfatase). The genetic, biochemical, and direct structural studies described here clarify the molecular pathogenic mechanisms of these disorders and suggest new diagnostic tools.
...
PMID:Lysosomal multienzyme complex: biochemistry, genetics, and molecular pathophysiology. 1155 Jul 99
Extensive clinical heterogeneity is seen in lysosomal storage disorders, regarding the age of onset and severity of symptoms, the organs involved, and effects on the central nervous system. A broad phenotypic spectrum is seen, for example, in mucopolysaccharidosis type I (Hurler/Scheie disease), Gaucher disease, the several forms of GM2-gangliosidosis and the different manifestations of
beta-galactosidase
deficiency (GM1-gangliosidosis and
Morquio disease
type B). Variable clinical expression of the same enzyme defect is not well understood. The presence of different mutations is only part of the explanation, as intrafamilial variability is observed in many cases. Other mechanisms, for example the effect of specific activators, may also have an influence on phenotype.
...
PMID:Variable clinical presentation in lysosomal storage disorders. 1175 78
In the present article we describe two cases with
Morquio
-B syndrome characterized by
beta-galactosidase
deficiency in a Muslim family. They were found to have skeletal dysplasia, short stature and short trunk dwarfism with undetectable level of
beta-galactosidase
in leucocytes. Probands' sister who had no clinical signs of mucopolysaccharidosis was investigated and found to have normal levels of the enzyme. Mother was found to have a deficient activity of
beta-galactosidase
and father was not available for the study. Since mother was pregnant, prenatal study from chorionic cells was carried out to investigate
beta-galactosidase
activity in the chorionic villus. An intermediate level of
beta-galactosidase
activity was found in the chorionic villus cells suggesting a carrier status. The diversity and rarity of the study makes it worth presenting.
...
PMID:Morquio-B syndrome (MPS-IV B) associated with beta-galactosidase deficiency in two siblings. 1187 11
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