1. Hyperuricemia and gout caused by missense mutation in d-lactate dehydrogenase
- Author
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Lior Zeller, Daniel Landau, Max Drabkin, Yuval Yogev, Raz Zarivach, Yonatan Perez, Rotem Kadir, Daniel Halperin, Ohad S. Birk, Ran Zalk, Evgenia Gurevich, and Ohad Wormser
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,musculoskeletal diseases ,0301 basic medicine ,Heterozygote ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Gout ,Mutation, Missense ,Hyperuricemia ,Mitochondrion ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Catalytic Domain ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Missense mutation ,Child ,Lactate Dehydrogenases ,Family Health ,Reabsorption ,Homozygote ,Concise Communication ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Stereoisomerism ,DNA ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Mitochondria ,Pedigree ,Uric Acid ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,HEK293 Cells ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Renal physiology ,Mutation ,D-lactate dehydrogenase ,Uric acid ,Female - Abstract
Gout is caused by deposition of monosodium urate crystals in joints when plasma uric acid levels are chronically elevated beyond the saturation threshold, mostly due to renal underexcretion of uric acid. Although molecular pathways of this underexcretion have been elucidated, its etiology remains mostly unknown. We demonstrate that gout can be caused by a mutation in LDHD within the putative catalytic site of the encoded d-lactate dehydrogenase, resulting in augmented blood levels of d-lactate, a stereoisomer of l-lactate, which is normally present in human blood in miniscule amounts. Consequent excessive renal secretion of d-lactate in exchange for uric acid reabsorption culminated in hyperuricemia and gout. We showed that LDHD expression is enriched in tissues with a high metabolic rate and abundant mitochondria and that d-lactate dehydrogenase resides in the mitochondria of cells overexpressing the human LDHD gene. Notably, the p.R370W mutation had no effect on protein localization. In line with the human phenotype, injection of d-lactate into naive mice resulted in hyperuricemia. Thus, hyperuricemia and gout can result from the accumulation of metabolites whose renal excretion is coupled to uric acid reabsorption.
- Published
- 2019