Rare Diseases Symptoms Automatic Extraction

Stability of alkyl-dihydroxyacetonephosphate synthase in human control and peroxisomal disorder fibroblasts.

[neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy]

Alkyl-dihydroxyacetonephosphate synthase (alkyl-DHAP synthase) is a peroxisomal enzyme that plays a key role in ether phospholipid biosynthesis. To determine the turnover of alkyl-DHAP synthase in several peroxisomal disorders, pulse-chase experiments were performed. In control fibroblasts, mature alkyl-DHAP synthase displayed a half-life of 23 +/- 12 h. In Zellweger syndrome and rhizomelic chondrodysplasia punctata fibroblast cell lines, in which alkyl-DHAP synthase cannot be imported into peroxisomes, the enzyme was mainly detected in its precursor form. This precursor form showed a much shorter half-life, 5 +/- 2 h. In contrast, when the precursor protein accumulated inside the peroxisome of a particular neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy cell line in which processing does not take place, a half-life of 18 +/- 8 h, resembling that of the mature protein in controls, was observed. In a cell line from a patient with a single deficiency in the activity of alkyl-DHAP synthase, the mature form was detected and its radioactivity decreased with a half-life of 16 +/- 7 h. Collectively, these results provide an explanation for the instability of alkyl-DHAP synthase outside its target organelle. Additionally, they indicate that both the precursor and mature form of alkyl-DHAP synthase exhibit considerable intraperoxisomal turnover.