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Biallelic variants in HPDL, encoding 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase-like protein, lead to an infantile neurodegenerative condition

Authors :
Judith J.M. Jans
Jeffrey Ding
Rudy Fabunan
Khalid Ibrahim
Shereen G. Ghosh
Valentina Stanley
Tawfeg Ben-Omran
Joseph G. Gleeson
David Murphy
Sangmoon Lee
Nils Wiedemann
Mohit Jain
Ehsan Ghayoor Karimiani
Aakash Patel
Shima Imannezhad
Elizabeth R. Waters
Javeria Raza Alvi
Maha S. Zaki
Daqiang Pan
Mehran Beiraghi Toosi
Philipp Lübbert
Bernd Kammerer
Farah Ashrafzadeh
Jennifer McEvoy-Venneri
Ghada M H Abdel-Salam
Nanda M. Verhoeven-Duif
Tipu Sultan
Danica Ross
Reza Maroofian
Guoliang Chai
Source :
Genetics in Medicine. 23:524-533
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Purpose Dioxygenases are oxidoreductase enzymes with roles in metabolic pathways necessary for aerobic life. 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase-like protein (HPDL), encoded by HPDL, is an orphan paralogue of 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPD), an iron-dependent dioxygenase involved in tyrosine catabolism. The function and association of HPDL with human diseases remain unknown. Methods We applied exome sequencing in a cohort of over 10,000 individuals with neurodevelopmental diseases. Effects of HPDL loss were investigated in vitro and in vivo, and through mass spectrometry analysis. Evolutionary analysis was performed to investigate the potential functional separation of HPDL from HPD. Results We identified biallelic variants in HPDL in eight families displaying recessive inheritance. Knockout mice closely phenocopied humans and showed evidence of apoptosis in multiple cellular lineages within the cerebral cortex. HPDL is a single-exonic gene that likely arose from a retrotransposition event at the base of the tetrapod lineage, and unlike HPD, HPDL is mitochondria-localized. Metabolic profiling of HPDL mutant cells and mice showed no evidence of altered tyrosine metabolites, but rather notable accumulations in other metabolic pathways. Conclusion The mitochondrial localization, along with its disrupted metabolic profile, suggests HPDL loss in humans links to a unique neurometabolic mitochondrial infantile neurodegenerative condition.

Details

ISSN :
10983600
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genetics in Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........59ec7e7a57c83f28d36716ba9dad8563
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41436-020-01010-y