Abstract

BackgroundThe pharmacological chaperones therapy is a promising approach to cure genetic diseases. It relies on substrate competitors used at sub-inhibitory concentration which can be administered orally, reach difficult tissues and have low cost. Clinical trials are currently carried out for Fabry disease, a lysosomal storage disorder caused by inherited genetic mutations of alpha-galactosidase. Regrettably, not all genotypes respond to these drugs.ResultsWe collected the experimental data available in literature on the enzymatic activity of ninety-six missense mutants of lysosomal alpha-galactosidase measured in the presence of pharmacological chaperones. We associated with each mutation seven features derived from the analysis of 3D-structure of the enzyme, two features associated with their thermo-dynamic stability and four features derived from sequence alone. Structural and thermodynamic analysis explains why some mutants of human lysosomal alpha-galactosidase cannot be rescued by pharmacological chaperones: approximately forty per cent of the non responsive cases examined can be correctly associated with a negative prognostic feature. They include mutations occurring in the active site pocket, mutations preventing disulphide bridge formation and severely destabilising mutations. Despite this finding, prediction of mutations responsive to pharmacological chaperones cannot be achieved with high accuracy relying on combinations of structure- and thermodynamic-derived features even with the aid of classical and state of the art statistical learning methods.We developed a procedure to predict responsive mutations with an accuracy as high as 87%: the method scores the mutations by using a suitable position-specific substitution matrix. Our approach is of general applicability since it does not require the knowledge of 3D-structure but relies only on the sequence.ConclusionsResponsiveness to pharmacological chaperones depends on the structural/functional features of the disease-associated protein, whose complex interplay is best reflected on sequence conservation by evolutionary pressure. We propose a predictive method which can be applied to screen novel mutations of alpha galactosidase. The same approach can be extended on a genomic scale to find candidates for therapy with pharmacological chaperones among proteins with unknown tertiary structures.

Highlights

  • The pharmacological chaperones therapy is a promising approach to cure genetic diseases

  • Since Pharmacological chaperone (PC) have been exploited for other lysosomal storage disorders such as Gaucher [2], Pompe [3], TaySachs, Sandhoff [4], GM1 gangliosidosis [5,6], NiemannPick [7,8] and for the stabilization of a variety of non lysosomal proteins of medical interest such as the ATP binding cassette (ABC) family of transporters, G-proteincoupled receptors (GPCRs), tyrosinase, copper ATPase, p53 and carnitine transporters [9,10]

  • It is generally accepted that disease causing mutations are more frequent at conserved sites whereas non disease polymorphisms prevail at variable site and we demonstrated that this holds for non responsive and responsive mutations

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Summary

Introduction

The pharmacological chaperones therapy is a promising approach to cure genetic diseases It relies on substrate competitors used at sub-inhibitory concentration which can be administered orally, reach difficult tissues and have low cost. Clinical trials are currently carried out for Fabry disease, a lysosomal storage disorder caused by inherited genetic mutations of alpha-galactosidase. The treatment of metabolic diseases with competitive inhibitors as chemical chaperons at sub-inhibitory intracellular concentrations was first proposed by Fan et al in 1999 [1]. They presented evidence that administration of Deoxy-galactonojirimycin (DGJ) at low concentration effectively enhanced mutant lysosomal alpha-galactosidase A [UNIPROT: AGAL_HUMAN] activities in lymphoblasts from Fabry patients with R301Q or Q279E mutations. Since PC have been exploited for other lysosomal storage disorders such as Gaucher [2], Pompe [3], TaySachs, Sandhoff [4], GM1 gangliosidosis [5,6], NiemannPick [7,8] and for the stabilization of a variety of non lysosomal proteins of medical interest such as the ATP binding cassette (ABC) family of transporters, G-proteincoupled receptors (GPCRs), tyrosinase, copper ATPase, p53 and carnitine transporters [9,10]

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