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Responsiveness of sphingosine phosphate lyase insufficiency syndrome to vitamin B6 cofactor supplementation.

Authors :
Zhao P
Liu ID
Hodgin JB
Benke PI
Selva J
Torta F
Wenk MR
Endrizzi JA
West O
Ou W
Tang E
Goh DL
Tay SK
Yap HK
Loh A
Weaver N
Sullivan B
Larson A
Cooper MA
Alhasan K
Alangari AA
Salim S
Gumus E
Chen K
Zenker M
Hildebrandt F
Saba JD
Source :
Journal of inherited metabolic disease [J Inherit Metab Dis] 2020 Sep; Vol. 43 (5), pp. 1131-1142. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 May 04.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) lyase is a vitamin B6-dependent enzyme that degrades sphingosine-1-phosphate in the final step of sphingolipid metabolism. In 2017, a new inherited disorder was described caused by mutations in SGPL1, which encodes sphingosine phosphate lyase (SPL). This condition is referred to as SPL insufficiency syndrome (SPLIS) or alternatively as nephrotic syndrome type 14 (NPHS14). Patients with SPLIS exhibit lymphopenia, nephrosis, adrenal insufficiency, and/or neurological defects. No targeted therapy for SPLIS has been reported. Vitamin B6 supplementation has therapeutic activity in some genetic diseases involving B6-dependent enzymes, a finding ascribed largely to the vitamin's chaperone function. We investigated whether B6 supplementation might have activity in SPLIS patients. We retrospectively monitored responses of disease biomarkers in patients supplemented with B6 and measured SPL activity and sphingolipids in B6-treated patient-derived fibroblasts. In two patients, disease biomarkers responded to B6 supplementation. S1P abundance and activity levels increased and sphingolipids decreased in response to B6. One responsive patient is homozygous for an SPL R222Q variant present in almost 30% of SPLIS patients. Molecular modeling suggests the variant distorts the dimer interface which could be overcome by cofactor supplementation. We demonstrate the first potential targeted therapy for SPLIS and suggest that 30% of SPLIS patients might respond to cofactor supplementation.<br /> (© 2020 SSIEM.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1573-2665
Volume :
43
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of inherited metabolic disease
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32233035
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/jimd.12238