Molecular insights on pathogenic effects of mutations causing phosphoglycerate kinase deficiency.

Phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) catalyzes an important ATP-generating step in glycolysis. PGK1 deficiency is an uncommon X-linked inherited disorder, generally characterized by various combinations of non-spherocytic hemolytic anemia, neurological dysfunctions, and myopathies. Patients rarely exhibit...

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Main Authors: Laurent R Chiarelli, Simone M Morera, Paola Bianchi, Elisa Fermo, Alberto Zanella, Alessandro Galizzi, Giovanna Valentini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/22348148/?tool=EBI
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spelling doaj-d93d0e0dc7be47b7a472f97bea7ebc602021-03-04T01:04:32ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0172e3206510.1371/journal.pone.0032065Molecular insights on pathogenic effects of mutations causing phosphoglycerate kinase deficiency.Laurent R ChiarelliSimone M MoreraPaola BianchiElisa FermoAlberto ZanellaAlessandro GalizziGiovanna ValentiniPhosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) catalyzes an important ATP-generating step in glycolysis. PGK1 deficiency is an uncommon X-linked inherited disorder, generally characterized by various combinations of non-spherocytic hemolytic anemia, neurological dysfunctions, and myopathies. Patients rarely exhibit all three clinical features. To provide a molecular framework to the different pathological manifestations, all known mutations were reviewed and 16 mutant enzymes, obtained as recombinant forms, were functionally and structurally characterized. Most mutations heavily affect thermal stability and to a different extent catalytic efficiency, in line with the remarkably low PGK activity clinically observed in the patients. Mutations grossly impairing protein stability, but moderately affecting kinetic properties (p.I47N, p.L89P, p.C316R, p.S320N, and p.A354P) present the most homogeneous correlation with the clinical phenotype. Patients carrying these mutations display hemolytic anemia and neurological disorders, and,except for p.A354P variant, no myopaty. Variants highly perturbed in both catalytic efficiency (p.G158V, p.D164V, p.K191del, D285V, p.D315N, and p.T378P) and heat stability (all, but p.T378P) result to be mainly associated with myopathy alone. Finally, mutations faintly affecting molecular properties (p.R206P, p.E252A, p.I253T, p.V266M, and p.D268N) correlate with a wide spectrum of clinical symptoms. These are the first studies that correlate the clinical symptoms with the molecular properties of the mutant enzymes. All findings indicate that the different clinical manifestations associated with PGK1 deficiency chiefly depend on the distinctive type of perturbations caused by mutations in the PGK1 gene, highlighting the need for determination of the molecular properties of PGK variants to assist in prognosis and genetic counseling. However, the clinical symptoms can not be understood only on the bases of molecular properties of the mutant enzyme. Different (environmental, metabolic, genetic and/or epigenetic) intervening factors can contribute toward the expression of PGK deficient clinical phenotypes.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/22348148/?tool=EBI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laurent R Chiarelli
Simone M Morera
Paola Bianchi
Elisa Fermo
Alberto Zanella
Alessandro Galizzi
Giovanna Valentini
spellingShingle Laurent R Chiarelli
Simone M Morera
Paola Bianchi
Elisa Fermo
Alberto Zanella
Alessandro Galizzi
Giovanna Valentini
Molecular insights on pathogenic effects of mutations causing phosphoglycerate kinase deficiency.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Laurent R Chiarelli
Simone M Morera
Paola Bianchi
Elisa Fermo
Alberto Zanella
Alessandro Galizzi
Giovanna Valentini
author_sort Laurent R Chiarelli
title Molecular insights on pathogenic effects of mutations causing phosphoglycerate kinase deficiency.
title_short Molecular insights on pathogenic effects of mutations causing phosphoglycerate kinase deficiency.
title_full Molecular insights on pathogenic effects of mutations causing phosphoglycerate kinase deficiency.
title_fullStr Molecular insights on pathogenic effects of mutations causing phosphoglycerate kinase deficiency.
title_full_unstemmed Molecular insights on pathogenic effects of mutations causing phosphoglycerate kinase deficiency.
title_sort molecular insights on pathogenic effects of mutations causing phosphoglycerate kinase deficiency.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) catalyzes an important ATP-generating step in glycolysis. PGK1 deficiency is an uncommon X-linked inherited disorder, generally characterized by various combinations of non-spherocytic hemolytic anemia, neurological dysfunctions, and myopathies. Patients rarely exhibit all three clinical features. To provide a molecular framework to the different pathological manifestations, all known mutations were reviewed and 16 mutant enzymes, obtained as recombinant forms, were functionally and structurally characterized. Most mutations heavily affect thermal stability and to a different extent catalytic efficiency, in line with the remarkably low PGK activity clinically observed in the patients. Mutations grossly impairing protein stability, but moderately affecting kinetic properties (p.I47N, p.L89P, p.C316R, p.S320N, and p.A354P) present the most homogeneous correlation with the clinical phenotype. Patients carrying these mutations display hemolytic anemia and neurological disorders, and,except for p.A354P variant, no myopaty. Variants highly perturbed in both catalytic efficiency (p.G158V, p.D164V, p.K191del, D285V, p.D315N, and p.T378P) and heat stability (all, but p.T378P) result to be mainly associated with myopathy alone. Finally, mutations faintly affecting molecular properties (p.R206P, p.E252A, p.I253T, p.V266M, and p.D268N) correlate with a wide spectrum of clinical symptoms. These are the first studies that correlate the clinical symptoms with the molecular properties of the mutant enzymes. All findings indicate that the different clinical manifestations associated with PGK1 deficiency chiefly depend on the distinctive type of perturbations caused by mutations in the PGK1 gene, highlighting the need for determination of the molecular properties of PGK variants to assist in prognosis and genetic counseling. However, the clinical symptoms can not be understood only on the bases of molecular properties of the mutant enzyme. Different (environmental, metabolic, genetic and/or epigenetic) intervening factors can contribute toward the expression of PGK deficient clinical phenotypes.
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/22348148/?tool=EBI
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