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The chaperone role of the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and its implications for rare diseases involving B6-dependent enzymes.
[primary hyperoxaluria type 1]
The
biologically
active
form
of
the
B
6
vitamers
is
pyridoxal
5
'
-
phosphate
(
PLP
)
,
which
plays
a
coenzymatic
role
in
several
distinct
enzymatic
activities
ranging
from
the
synthesis
,
interconversion
and
degradation
of
amino
acids
to
the
replenishment
of
one
-carbon
units
,
synthesis
and
degradation
of
biogenic
amines
,
synthesis
of
tetrapyrrolic
compounds
and
metabolism
of
amino-sugars
.
In
the
catalytic
process
of
PLP-dependent
enzymes
,
the
substrate
amino
acid
forms
a
Schiff
base
with
PLP
and
the
electrophilicity
of
the
PLP
pyridine
ring
plays
important
roles
in
the
subsequent
catalytic
steps
.
While
the
essential
role
of
PLP
in
the
acquisition
of
biological
activity
of
many
proteins
is
long
recognized
,
the
finding
that
some
PLP-enzymes
require
the
coenzyme
for
refolding
in
vitro
points
to
an
additional
role
of
PLP
as
a
chaperone
in
the
folding
process
.
Mutations
in
the
genes
encoding
PLP-enzymes
are
causative
of
several
rare
inherited
diseases
.
Patients
affected
by
some
of
these
diseases
(
AADC
deficiency
,
cystathionuria
,
homocystinuria
,
gyrate
atrophy
,
primary
hyperoxaluria
type
1
,
xanthurenic
aciduria
,
X-
linked
sideroblastic
anaemia
)
can
benefit
,
although
at
different
degrees
,
from
the
administration
of
pyridoxine
,
a
PLP
precursor
.
The
effect
of
the
coenzyme
is
not
limited
to
mutations
that
affect
the
enzyme-coenzyme
interaction
,
but
also
to
those
that
cause
folding
defects
,
reinforcing
the
idea
that
PLP
could
play
a
chaperone
role
and
improve
the
folding
efficiency
of
misfolded
variants
.
In
this
review
,
recent
biochemical
and
cell
biology
studies
highlighting
the
chaperoning
activity
of
the
coenzyme
on
folding-
defective
variants
of
PLP-enzymes
associated
with
rare
diseases
are
presented
and
discussed
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"gyrate atrophy"
symptom
primary hyperoxaluria type 1
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