Abstract

BackgroundCongenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) are rare diseases with impaired glycosylation and multiorgan disfunction, including hemostatic and inflammatory disorders. Factor XII (FXII), the first element of the contact phase, has an emerging role in hemostasia and inflammation. FXII deficiency protects against thrombosis and the p.Thr309Lys variant is involved in hereditary angioedema through the hyperreactivity caused by the associated defective O-glycosylation. We studied FXII in CDG aiming to supply further information of the glycosylation of this molecule, and its functional and clinical effects. Plasma FXII from 46 PMM2-CDG patients was evaluated by coagulometric and by Western Blot in basal conditions, treated with N-glycosydase F or activated by silica or dextran sulfate. A recombinant FXII expression model was used to validate the secretion and glycosylation of wild-type and variants targeting the two described FXII N-glycosylation sites (p.Asn230Lys; p.Asn414Lys) as well as the p.Thr309Lys variant.ResultsPMM2-CDG patients had normal FXII levels (117%) but high proportions of a form lacking N-glycosylation at Asn414. Recombinant FXII p.Asn230Lys, and p.Asn230Lys&p.Asn414Lys had impaired secretion and increased intracellular retention compared to wild-type, p.Thr309Lys and p.Asn414Lys variants. The hypoglycosylated form of PMM2-CDG activated similarly than FXII fully glycosylated. Accordingly, no PMM2-CDG had angioedema. FXII levels did not associate to vascular events, but hypoglycosylated FXII, like hypoglycosylated transferrin, antithrombin and FXI levels did it.ConclusionsN-glycosylation at Asn230 is essential for FXII secretion. PMM2-CDG have high levels of FXII lacking N-glycosylation at Asn414, but this glycoform displays similar activation than fully glycosylated, explaining the absence of angioedema in CDG.

Highlights

  • There is a renaissance in studying the role of factor XII (FXII) in pathways leading to thrombosis and inflammation

  • We proposed that the analysis of Factor XII (FXII), a hepatic 80 kDa glycoprotein containing 2 N-glycosylation sites, in a large cohort of PMM2-Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) patients together with a recombinant model deleting the two N-glycosylation signals might help to understand the role of N-glycosylation in FXII, and the clinical impact of an impaired N-glycosylation of this molecule in PMM2CDG patients

  • The study of plasma FXII in our cohort of PMM2-CDG patients by Western Blot confirmed that FXII levels in patients were in the normal range and correlated with the rs1801020 genotype, as carriers of the C/C genotype had almost twice FXII in plasma than carriers of the T/T genotype (Data not shown)

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Summary

Introduction

There is a renaissance in studying the role of factor XII (FXII) in pathways leading to thrombosis and inflammation. Different FXII variants affecting the prolinerich domain, the recurrent Thr309Lys mutation, have been recently involved in a type of lifethreatening inherited swelling disorder, hereditary angioedema (HAE) [11,12,13,14]. Activated FXII (FXIIa) may promote both the activation of its procoagulant substrate factor XI (FXI), and the release of the proinflammatory mediator bradikinin (BK) by kallikrein-mediated cleavage of high molecular weight kininogen [15]. Factor XII (FXII), the first element of the contact phase, has an emerging role in hemostasia and inflammation. FXII deficiency protects against thrombosis and the p.Thr309Lys variant is involved in hereditary angioedema through the hyperreactivity caused by the associated defective O-glycosylation. A recombinant FXII expression model was used to validate the secretion and glycosylation of wild-type and variants targeting the two described FXII N-glycosylation sites (p.Asn230Lys; p.Asn414Lys) as well as the p.Thr309Lys variant

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