Neuraminidase deficiency with beta-galactosidase deficiency Goldberg syndrome GSL Deficiency of lysosomal protective protein Deficiency of cathepsin A Deficiency of protective protein/cathepsin A PPCA deficiency Carboxylpeptidase L deficiency
(from OMIM)Cathepsin A (CTSA , CATHA protective protein PPCA, beta-galactosidase protective protein PPGB, Carboxypeptidase L) is a ubiquitously expressed multifunctional enzyme, with deamidase, esterase, and carboxypeptidase activities and a preference for substrates with hydrophobic amino acid residues at the P1-prime position. Association with CTSA, as part of the lysosomal multienzyme complex, is essential for stabilization of lysosomal beta-galactosidase (GLB1; 611458), as well as for activation of the lysosomal neuraminidase (NEU1; 608272) (summary by Seyrantepe et al., 2008). Goldberg et al. (1971) described 3 children (2 boys and a girl), in a Mexican family with first-cousin parents, who had a disorder characterized by dwarfism, gargoyle facies, mental retardation, seizures, corneal clouding, macular cherry red spot, beta-galactosidase deficiency, dysostosis multiplex, and hearing loss. The absence of clinically enlarged viscera, vacuolated blood cells, and mucopolysacchariduria was likewise distinctive. The combination of features of a mucopolysaccharidosis and a sphingolipidosis suggested that this should be considered a mucolipidosis. Berard-Badier et al. (1970) described a 17-year-old patient (case 3) who had corneal opacities, a cherry red spot, and the same type of vacuolation of the Kupffer cells as that in the family studied by Goldberg et al. (1971). Most of the cases have been Japanese. Chitayat et al. (1988) described a male with juvenile galactosialidosis who presented at age 19 with hip arthralgia and for evaluation for possible spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia. He had facial 'coarseness,' corneal clouding, mitral and aortic regurgitation, and hepatosplenomegaly. Electron microscopy of skin biopsy and peripheral blood lymphocytes showed membrane-bound fibrillogranular inclusion. The urine showed elevated sialyloligosaccharides but no free sialic acid. Alpha-neuraminidase and beta-galactosidase were both low in fibroblasts. Thomas et al. (1979) found deficiency of neuraminidase in cultured fibroblasts from Goldberg's original patient. Cases of combined deficiency have been reported by Lowden and O'Brien (1979), Hoogeveen et al. (1980), and Wenger et al. (1978). Although this form may be clinically indistinguishable from the sialidoses without deficiency of beta-galactosidase, its distinctness is indicated by complementation in heterokaryon experiments. No evidence of a structural mutation of beta-galactosidase was found (Hoeksema et al., 1980). In normal cells and GM(1)-gangliosidosis cells, beta-galactosidase has a half-life of about 10 days, whereas in the doubly deficient cells it has a half-life of less than 1 day. This reduction is due to enhanced degradation. The form which combines neuraminidase and beta-galactosidase deficiencies appears to have a defect in a 32,000 dalton glycoprotein necessary for activation or proteolytic protection of these 2 enzymes (d'Azzo et al., 1982).
RATIONALE: Progressive restriction of the spinal bio-mechanics is not-uncommon deformity encountered in spine clinics. Congenital spinal fusion as seen in Klippel-Feil-anomaly, progressive non-infectious anterior vertebral fusion, and progressive spinal hyperostosis secondary to ossification of the anterior longitudinal spinal ligament are well delineated and recognized. PATIENT CONCERNS: A 24-year-old girl has history of osteoporosis since her early childhood, associated with multiple axial and appendicular fractures and scoliosis. Recently she presented with episodes of severe back pain, spinal rigidity/stiffness with total loss of spine biomechanics. DIAGNOSES: She was provisionally diagnosed as having osteogenesis imperfecta and was investigated for COL1A1/A2 mutations which have been proven to be negative. Autosomal recessive type of osteogenesis imperfecta was proposed as well, no mutations have been encountered. A homozygous for CTSA gene mutation, the gene associated with Galactosialidosis was identified via whole exome sequencing (Next-Generation Sequencing projects) has been identified. INTERVENTIONS: Early in her life she had a history of frequent fractures of the long bones since she was 4 years which was followed by vertebral fractures at the age of 12 years. She manifested lower serum 25OH-D levels and were associated with lower LS-aBMD Z-scores with higher urinary bone turnover indexes (urinary NTX/Cr). OUTCOMES: Lysosomal storage diseases (LSD) have a strong correlation with the development of osteoporosis. LSD causes skeletal abnormalities results from a lack of skeletal remodeling and ossification abnormalities owing to abnormal deposition of GAGs (impaired degradation of glycosaminoglycans ) in bone and cartilage. 3D reconstruction CT scan of the spine showed diffuse hyperostosis of almost the entire spine (begins at the level of T4- extending downwards to involve the whole thoraco-lumbar and upper part of the sacrum) with total diffuse fusion of the pedicles, the transverse and articular processes, the laminae and the spinous processes. LESSONS: This is the first clinical report of adult patient with a history of osteoporosis and fractures with the late diagnosis of Galactosialidosis. Osteogenesis imperfecta (autosomal dominant and recessive) were the first given diagnoses which proven negative. The pathophysiology of the spine ankylosis in our current patient and its correlation with LSD, antiresorptive medications, vitamin D3 and supplemental calcium is not fully understood. Therefore, further studies are needed to elucidate this sort of correlation.
        
Title: Galactosialidosis: historic aspects and overview of investigated and emerging treatment options Annunziata I, d'Azzo A Ref: Expert Opin Orphan Drugs, 5:131, 2017 : PubMed
INTRODUCTION: Galactosialidosis is a glycoprotein storage disease caused by mutations in the CTSA gene, encoding lysosomal protective protein/cathepsin A (PPCA). The enzyme's catalytic activity is distinct from its protective function towards beta-galactosidase (beta-GAL) and neuraminidase 1 (NEU1), with which PPCA forms a complex. In this configuration the two glycosidases acquire their full activity and stability in lysosomes. Deficiency of PPCA results in combined NEU1/beta-GAL deficiency. Because of its low incidence, galactosialidosis is considered an orphan disorder with no therapy yet available. AREAS COVERED: This review gives a historic overview on the discovery of PPCA, which defined galactosialidosis as a new clinical entity; the evidence for the existence of the PPCA/NEU1/beta-GAL complex; the clinical forms of galactosialidosis and disease-causing CTSA mutations. Ppca-/- mice have proven to be a suitable model to test different therapeutic approaches, paving the way for the development of clinical trials for patients with galactosialidosis. EXPERT OPINION: Improved understanding of the molecular bases of disease has sparked renewed incentive from clinicians and scientists alike to develop therapies for rare conditions, like GS, and has increased the willingness of biotech companies to invest in the manufacturing of new therapeutics. Both ERT and gene therapy may become available to patients in the near future.
BACKGROUND: Identifying genetic variants that lead to discernible phenotypes is the core of Mendelian genetics. An approach that considers embryonic lethality as a bona fide Mendelian phenotype has the potential to reveal novel genetic causes, which will further our understanding of early human development at a molecular level. Consanguineous families in which embryonic lethality segregates as a recessive Mendelian phenotype offer a unique opportunity for high throughput novel gene discovery as has been established for other recessive postnatal phenotypes. RESULTS: We have studied 24 eligible families using autozygosity mapping and whole-exome sequencing. In addition to revealing mutations in genes previously linked to embryonic lethality in severe cases, our approach revealed seven novel candidate genes (THSD1, PIGC, UBN1, MYOM1, DNAH14, GALNT14, and FZD6). A founder mutation in one of these genes, THSD1, which has been linked to vascular permeability, accounted for embryonic lethality in three of the study families. Unlike the other six candidate genes, we were able to identify a second mutation in THSD1 in a family with a less severe phenotype consisting of hydrops fetalis and persistent postnatal edema, which provides further support for the proposed link between this gene and embryonic lethality. CONCLUSIONS: Our study represents an important step towards the systematic analysis of "embryonic lethal genes" in humans.
BACKGROUND: Mutations in the CTSA gene, that encodes the protective protein/cathepsin A or PPCA, lead to the secondary deficiency of beta-galactosidase (GLB1) and neuraminidase 1 (NEU1), causing the lysosomal storage disorder galactosialidosis (GS). Few clinical cases of GS have been reported in the literature, the majority of them belonging to the juvenile/adult group of patients. METHODS: The correct nomenclature of mutations for this gene is discussed through the analysis of the three PPCA/CTSA isoforms available in the GenBank database. Phenotype-genotype correlation has been assessed by computational analysis and review of previously reported single amino acid substitutions. RESULTS: We report the clinical and mutational analyses of four cases with the rare infantile form of GS. We identified three novel nucleotide changes, two of them resulting in the missense mutations, c.347A>G (p.His116Arg), c.775T>C (p.Cys259Arg), and the third, c.1216C>T, resulting in the p.Gln406* stop codon, a type of mutation identified for the first time in GS. An Italian founder effect of the c.114delG mutation can be suggested according to the origin of the only three patients carrying this mutation reported here and in the literature. CONCLUSIONS: In early reports mutations nomenclature was selected according to all CTSA isoforms (three different isoforms), thus generating a lot of confusion. In order to assist physicians in the interpretation of detected mutations, we mark the correct nomenclature for CTSA mutations. The complexity of pathology caused by the multifunctions of CTSA, and the very low numbers of mutations (only 23 overall) in relation to the length of the CTSA gene are discussed.In addition, the in silico functional predictions of all reported missense mutations allowed us to closely predict the early infantile, late infantile and juvenile phenotypes, also disclosing different degrees of severity in the juvenile phenotype.
We report a Brazilian girl who was diagnosed as having galactosialidosis (deficiency of protective protein/cathepsin A; PPCA deficiency; GS) at the age of 2 years 6 months during an extensive investigation for renal failure. She was found to have low levels of both beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase in fibroblasts and to be a carrier of two novel mutations in the PPGB gene (p.G57V and p.R396W). She received a renal allograft at the age of 3 years 4 months. Transplantation was successful and graft function remains excellent after 6 years. However, the patient shows signs of progression of her primary disease. To our knowledge, she is the first GS patient to be given renal transplantation worldwide. We propose that renal transplantation should be considered as a therapeutic option for the treatment of severe renal complications of GS.
We describe the clinical findings, and the molecular and biochemical studies in an Italian family with recurrent hydrops fetalis due to galactosialidosis (GS). GS is a rare lysosomal storage disorder caused by a deficiency of the protective protein/cathepsin A (PPCA). This protein forms a high-molecular-weight complex with the hydrolases beta-galactosidase (GLB1) and neuraminidase (NEU1). By virtue of this association these two enzymes are correctly compartmentalized in lysosomes and protected against rapid proteolytic degradation. Controversial data show that PPCA is also present in a second complex, including the Elastin Binding Protein (EBP) the EBP-receptor, which is involved in elastogenesis, and NEU1. We investigated the potential role of the PPCA in both complexes. Two new genetic lesions (c60delG and IVS2+1 G > T) that lead to a frameshift and a premature stop codon were detected in the PPCA cDNA and genomic DNA of the patient. The deleterious effect of such mutations was confirmed by the complete absence of the PPCA protein on Western blots. Thus, we examined the effect of the loss of PPCA on the two protein complexes in the patient's fibroblasts. Interestingly, a reduced amount of both GLB1 and EBP proteins was detected. These data confirm that PPCA is present in two functional complexes one with GLB1 and NEU1 in the lysosomal lumen and the other with EBP at the cell surface. The reduction in GLB1 and EBP confirms that PPCA is essential for their integrity.
Galactosialidosis is an autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disease caused by a combined deficiency of lysosomal beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase as a result of a primary defect in the protective protein/cathepsin A (PPCA). We report the first 2 Dutch cases of early infantile galactosialidosis, both presenting with neonatal ascites. The defect was identified in urine, leukocytes, and fibroblasts. Residual activity was determined with a modified assay for cathepsin A and was <5% in leukocytes and <1% in fibroblasts. Histological examination of the placenta in case 1 showed extensive vacuolization in all cell types. Northern blot analysis of RNA isolated from the patients' cultured fibroblasts showed substantially decreased levels of the PPCA transcript, which nevertheless had the correct size of 2 kb. Mutation analysis of both mRNA and genomic DNA from the patients identified two novel mutations in the PPCA locus. Case 1 was a compound heterozygote, with a single missense mutation in one allele, which resulted in Gly57Ser amino acid substitution, and a single C insertion at nucleotide position 899 in the second allele, which gave rise to a frame shift and premature termination codon. Case 2 was homozygous for the same C899 insertion found in case 1.
        
Title: Structural and functional study of K453E mutant protective protein/cathepsin A causing the late infantile form of galactosialidosis Takiguchi K, Itoh K, Shimmoto M, Ozand PT, Doi H, Sakuraba H Ref: J Hum Genet, 45:200, 2000 : PubMed
To clarify the molecular basis of the late infantile form of galactosialidosis, we characterized a defective protective protein/cathepsin A (PPCA) gene product with the K453E mutation newly found in an Arabic patient with this disease. Immunocytochemical, expression, and metabolic studies revealed that the precursor PPCA was synthesized but not processed to the mature form, and it was degraded in the mutant. A structural model of the mutant PPCA was constructed by amino acid substitution of 453glutamic acid for lysine in the crystal structure of the wild type PPCA precursor reported. The results show that the K453E mutation is located at the dimer interface of the PPCA and reduces the hydrogen bond formation in the dimer. This structural change may cause instability of the PPCA dimer.
        
Title: Anaemia and thrombocytopenia due to haemophagocytosis in a 7-month-old boy with galactosialidosis Olcay L, Gumruk F, Boduroglu K, Coskun T, Tuncbilek E Ref: J Inherit Metab Dis, 21:679, 1998 : PubMed
Galactosialidosis is a recessively inherited lysosomal storage disease characterized by the combined deficiency of neuraminidase and beta-galactosidase secondary to the genetic deficiency of cathepsin A/protective protein. In lysosomes, cathepsin A forms a high-molecular-weight complex with beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase that protects these enzymes against intralysosomal proteolysis. In a patient affected with late infantile form of galactosialidosis, we found two new cathepsin A mutations, a two-nucleotide deletion, c517delTT and an intronic mutation, IVS8+9C-->G resulting in abnormal splicing and a five-nucleotide insertion in the cathepsin A cDNA. Both mutations cause frameshifts and result in the synthesis of truncated cathepsin A proteins, which, as suggested by structural modeling, are incapable of dimerization, complex formation, and catalysis. However, enzymatic assays, gel-filtration, and Western blot analysis of the patient's cultured skin fibroblast extracts showed the presence of a small amount of normal-size, catalytically active cathepsin A and cathepsin A-beta-galactosidase 680 kDa complex, suggesting that a low amount of cathepsin A mRNA is spliced normally and produces the wild-type protein. This may contribute to the relatively mild phenotype of the patient and illustrates the importance of critically comparing molecular results with clinical and biochemical phenotypes.
Deficiency of lysosomal protective protein/cathepsin A in humans is the primary cause of galactosialidosis, a lysosomal storage disease characterized by combined deficiency of beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase. We have investigated 20 galactosialidosis patients and nine of their obligate heterozygous parents. A group of 12 patients with the early infantile type of the disease exhibited practically complete absence of cathepsin A activity, whereas eight patients with either the late infantile or the juvenile/adult type had 2-5% residual activity. Highest levels (5%) were present in two patients with milder clinical manifestations and later onset of the disease. In most fibroblast strains, beta-galactosidase activity was 10-15% of normal levels, whereas neuraminidase was reduced to less than 4%. Interestingly, a substantial residual activity (10%) of the latter enzyme was detected in the patient with the mildest phenotype and the highest cathepsin A activity. Heterozygous values for cathepsin A were reduced on average to half of normal levels. However, in two cell strains, the activity was far below control range, and in these cases, neuraminidase activity was severely depressed. Finally, we showed that cathepsin A had considerable activity in chorionic villi and amniocytes, but was deficient in amniocytes from a pregnancy with an affected fetus, indicating the relevance of cathepsin A assay for prenatal diagnosis of galactosialidosis.
Mutations in the gene encoding lysosomal protective protein/cathepsin A (PPCA) are the cause of the lysosomal disorder galactosialidosis (GS). Depending on age of onset and severity of the symptoms, patients present with either an early infantile (EI), a late infantile (LI), or a juvenile/adult (J/A) form of the disease. To study genotype-phenotype correlation in this disorder, we have analyzed the mutations in the PPCA gene of eight clinically different patients. In two EI and one J/A patient, we have identified four novel point mutations (Val104Met, Leu208Pro, Gly411Ser and Ser23Tyr), that prevent phosphorylation and, hence, lysosomal localization and maturation of the mutant precursors. Two amino acid substitutions (Phe412Val and Tyr221Asn) are shared by five LI patients. These mutations appear to be pathognomonic for this phenotype, and determine the clinical outcome depending on whether they are present together or in combination with other mutations. The latter include a single base deletion and a novel amino acid change (Met378Thr), which generates an additional glycosylation site. Within the LI group, patients carrying the Phe412Val mutation are clinically more severe than those with the Tyr221Asn substitution. This is in agreement with the biochemical behavior of the Asn221-mutant protein, that is, like the Phe412Val protein, phosphorylated, routed to lysosomes and proteolytically processed, but its intralysosomal stability is intermediate between that of wild-type PPCA and Val412-PPCA. Overall, these results may explain the clinical heterogeneity observed in GS patients and may help to correlate mutant allelic combinations with specific clinical phenotypes.
Title: Protective protein for beta-galactosidase, Ppgb, maps to the distal imprinting region of mouse chromosome 2 but is not imprinted Williamson CM, Dutton ER, Beechey CV, Peters J Ref: Genomics, 22:240, 1994 : PubMed
Human chromosome 20 is conserved as a single segment on distal mouse chromosome (Chr) 2. PPGB, protective protein for beta-galactosidase, maps to human chromosome 20q13.1, and from linkage analysis of two interspecific crosses incorporating the mouse reciprocal translocations, T(2;8)2Wa (T2Wa) and T(2;16)28H (T28H), we have mapped the mouse homologue, Ppgb, to the conserved region on distal mouse Chr 2. From the combined data, the order of markers is T2Wa-Ada-Ppgb-D2Mit25-T28H. Loci mapping between the T2Wa and T28H breakpoints lie in a region that is subject to parental imprinting, and so expression of Ppgb was tested in mice with maternal duplication/paternal deficiency and its reciprocal for the distal region of Chr 2. We have shown by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) that both parental alleles of Ppgb were expressed in the brain and kidney of 17.5-day-old embryos, 18.5-day-old embryos, and newborn mice. Thus, Ppgb does not appear to be subject to imprinting effects in the mouse.
Multiple highly polymorphic markers have been used to construct a genetic map of the q12-q13.1 region of chromosome 20 and to map the location of the maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) locus. The genetic map encompasses 23 cM and includes 11 loci with PIC values > .50, seven of which have PICs > .70. New dinucleotide repeat polymorphisms associated with the D20S17, PPGB, and ADA loci have been identified and mapped. The dinucleotide repeat polymorphisms have increased the PIC of the ADA locus to .89 and, with an additional RFLP at the D20S17 locus, the PIC of the D20S17 locus to .88. The order of the D20S17 and ADA loci determined genetically (cen-ADA-D20S17-qter) was confirmed by multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization. The previously unmapped PPGB marker is closely linked to D20S17, with a two-point lod score of 50.53 at theta = .005. These markers and dinucleotide repeat markers associated with the D20S43, D20S46, D20S55, D20S75, and PLC1 loci and RFLPs at the D20S16, D20S17, D20S22, and D20S33 have been used to map the MODY locus on chromosome 20 to a 13-cM (sex averaged) interval encompassing ADA, D20S17, PPGB, D20S16, and D20S75 on the long arm of chromosome 20 and to create a genetic framework for additional genetic and physical mapping studies of the region. With these multiple highly polymorphic loci, any MODY family of appropriate size can be tested for the chromosome 20 linkage.
Four different protective protein cDNA mutations, 146A-->G (Q49R), 193T-->C (W65R), 268-269TC-->CT (S90L), and 1184A-->G (Y395C), were identified in six Japanese galactosialidosis patients with various phenotypic manifestations, and another mutation, 746T-->A (Y249N), in a patient of French-German origin with an atypical clinical course. Y395C was a common mutation in four Japanese patients in infancy and childhood; two juvenile patients were compound heterozygotes of Y395C and another common mutation, SpDEx7, and the other two infants were compound heterozygotes of Y395C and mutant alleles other than SpDEx7. We confirmed these mutations in genomic DNA by direct-sequence analysis or restriction-site analysis. The mutant cDNA clones, transiently expressed in a transformed galactosialidosis cell line, did not restore the secondarily deficient beta-galactosidase or alpha-neuraminidase activity except for the Y249N mutation that expressed some carboxypeptidase activity and restored the two lysosomal enzyme activities. Pulse-chase analysis detected a small amount of the mature form, as well as the precursor, in the cells transfected with the Y249N cDNA. Only precursor proteins were detected, mature proteins not appearing for the other mutant cDNAs.
        
Title: Exclusion map of the gene for neuraminidase from 10(pter-->p15.1) Tokano T, Horigome H, Shibata S Ref: Clin Genet, 43:166, 1993 : PubMed
Lysosomal beta-galactosidase (beta-Gal) occurs either alone in monomeric and dimeric forms, or in a high-M(r) complex with at least two additional proteins. One is neuraminidase and the second is the protective protein, which has also been shown to possess carboxypeptidase activity. beta-Gal activity is deficient in GM1-gangliosidosis as a primary defect, and is secondarily affected in galactosialidosis (GS), where the primary defect is the absence of protective protein activity. Fibroblasts from three patients with GM1-gangliosidosis, type 1, showed markedly reduced amounts of beta-Gal cross-reacting material (CRM), and a fourth appeared to have normal levels. A patient with type 2 GM1-gangliosidosis was also found to be CRM-normal. These findings demonstrate that patients with GM1-gangliosidosis type 1 are heterogeneous with respect to the level of residual beta-Gal protein. Fibroblasts from four patients with GS were strongly CRM-positive with an anti-beta-Gal antibody, as was a sample of brain from one of these patients, suggesting that the loss of beta-Gal activity is linked to a subtler change in the primary structure of the enzyme than has been previously thought. While three GS cell lines displayed reduced carboxypeptidase activity (to 32-42% of the control), one cell line was completely devoid of activity, demonstrating that while carboxypeptidase activity is a property of the protective protein this action is distinct and separate from its protective role. On direct immunoprecipitation with anti-beta-Gal antibody, a portion of the total carboxypeptidase activity co-precipitated with beta-Gal from extracts of normal and GM1-gangliosidosis cells, consistent with the presence of the complex in these cells. However, no carboxypeptidase activity was precipitable with this antibody from GS fibroblasts, suggesting the absence of complex from these cells. To examine this further, the various forms of beta-Gal were resolved by h.p.l.c. molecular-sieve chromatography. Three forms of beta-Gal activity were resolved in normal cells: a complex, a dimer and a monomer. Residual beta-Gal activity of GS cells resolved into two of these forms, the complex and the monomer. In normal and GM1-gangliosidosis cells a portion of the total carboxypeptidase activity co-chromatographed with the complex while the bulk of the activity occurred in a single 36,000-M(r) peak. Only the low-M(r) carboxypeptidase activity was detected in GS cells. This confirms our results on immunoprecipitation indicating that portions of the beta-Gal and the carboxypeptidase activities exist outside the complex in normal, GM1-gangliosidosis and GS cells. In summary, the loss of protective protein function from GS cells results in disproportionate loss of the dimeric and monomeric forms of beta-Gal activity, but does not result in the complete degradation of the protein.
We report on a 14-year-old boy with ring chromosome 20. Clinical manifestations included postnatal growth retardation, epilepsy, microcephaly, behaviour disorder, minor facial anomalies, small sella turcica, possible partial growth hormone deficiency, and mental retardation. A decreased activity of enzyme carboxypeptidase-L/protective protein (CP/PP) in cultured fibroblasts was demonstrated in our patient and a patient with a karyotype 46,XY,-14, + der(14)t(14;20)(14pter----14q32.3::20q13.1----20qter)m at. This suggests possible assignment of the CP/PP gene to the distal segment of 20q.
        
Title: Human placental beta-galactosidase. Characterization of the dimer and complex forms of the enzyme Hubbes M, D'Agrosa RM, Callahan JW Ref: Biochemical Journal, 285 ( Pt 3):827, 1992 : PubMed
GM1 ganglioside beta-galactosidase (beta-Gal) is deficient in the autosomal recessive disorder GM1 gangliosidosis. A portion of the enzyme occurs in a complex with neuraminidase and an additional glycoprotein, protective protein, but the nature of the interactions conferring the stability of the complex is unknown. Affinity chromatography of beta-Gal on p-aminophenylthiogalactose-Sepharose (PATG-Sepharose) at pH 4.3, the pH optimum of beta-Gal, resulted in a 260-fold enrichment of beta-Gal, but the major protein in the fraction had an M(r) value of 74,000. Affinity chromatography on PATG-Sepharose at pH 5.2 showed substantial enrichment (4000-fold) of beta-Gal, and the mature form of the enzyme (M(r) 64,000) was the major protein in the preparation. Using h.p.l.c. molecular-sieve chromatography, we found that about 15% of the total beta-Gal occurred in a high-M(r) form (greater than 600,000), the presumptive complex, with 85% eluting at M(r) 150,000, suggestive of a dimer. This distribution was independent of both high (60 mg/ml) and low (5 mg/ml) protein concentration and the pH (pH 4.3 or 5.2) of the sample applied to the column. Furthermore, incubation for 90 min at 37 degrees C, conditions which had previously been suggested as optimal for formation of the complex, had no effect on this distribution. Further fractionation by anion-exchange chromatography and a second affinity column step yielded a beta-Gal preparation that contained a single polypeptide chain (M(r) 64,000), was devoid of neuraminidase and protective protein (absent carboxypeptidase activity), and when injected into rabbits gave rise to monospecific rabbit antisera. We conclude that the protein composition of the complex is variable (i.e. it is different when isolated at pH 4.3 and 5.2) and that the amount of beta-Gal tightly associated with the complex constitutes a small fraction of the total beta-Gal activity. The more prevalent form of the enzyme is a beta-Gal homodimer that is stable and devoid of either neuraminidase activity or protective protein.
        
Title: Human lysosomal protective protein. Glycosylation, intracellular transport, and association with beta-galactosidase in the endoplasmic reticulum Morreau H, Galjart NJ, Willemsen R, Gillemans N, Zhou XY, d'Azzo A Ref: Journal of Biological Chemistry, 267:17949, 1992 : PubMed
In lysosomes beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase acquire a stable and active conformation through their association with the protective protein. The latter is homologous to serine carboxypeptidases and has cathepsin A-like activity which is distinct from its protective function towards the two glycosidases. To define signals in the human protective protein important for its intracellular transport, and to determine the site of its association with beta-galactosidase, we have generated a set of mutated protective protein cDNAs carrying targeted base substitutions. These mutants were either singly transfected into COS-1 cells or cotransfected together with wild type human beta-galactosidase. We show that all point mutations cause either a complete or partial retention of the protective protein precursor in the endoplasmic reticulum. This abnormal accumulation leads to degradation of the mutant proteins probably in this compartment. Only the oligosaccharide chain on the 32-kDa subunit acquires the mannose 6-phosphate recognition marker, the one on the 20-kDa subunit seems to be merely essential for the stability of the mature protein. In cotransfection experiments, wild type beta-galactosidase and protective protein appear to assemble already as precursors, soon after synthesis, in the endoplasmic reticulum. Mutated protective protein precursors that are retained in the endoplasmic reticulum or pre-Golgi complex interact with and withhold normal beta-galactosidase molecules in the same compartments, thereby preventing their normal routing.
Normal lymphocyte prometaphase chromosome spreads were hybridized in situ using single- and double-color fluorescence techniques. The results obtained with either the 1.8-kb protective protein cDNA or a 12-kb genomic fragment of the human protective protein gene as probe demonstrate that the PPGB gene is localized on the long arm of chromosome 20. This assignment was confirmed by hybridization with whole chromosome DNA libraries.
The lysosomal disorder galactosialidosis is caused by deficiency of the protective protein in the absence of which the activities of the enzymes beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase are reduced. Aside from its protective function towards the two glycosidases, this protein has cathepsin A-like activity. A point mutation in the protective protein gene, resulting in the substitution of Phe412 with Val in the gene product, was identified in two unrelated patients with the late infantile form of the disease. Expression in COS-1 cells of a protective protein cDNA with the base substitution resulted in the synthesis of a mutant protein that lacks cathepsin A-like activity. The newly made mutant precursor was shown to be partially retained in the endoplasmic reticulum. Only a fraction is transported to the lysosomes where it is degraded soon after proteolytic processing into the mature two-chain form. Since the mutant precursor, contrary to the wild type protein, does not form homodimers, the dimerization process might be a condition for the proper targeting and stable conformation of the protective protein. These results clarify the mechanism underlying the combined deficiency in these patients, and give new insight into the structure-function relationship of the wild type protein.
        
Title: Galactosialidosis: simultaneous deficiency of esterase, carboxy-terminal deamidase and acid carboxypeptidase activities Kase R, Itoh K, Takiyama N, Oshima A, Sakuraba H, Suzuki Y Ref: Biochemical & Biophysical Research Communications, 172:1175, 1990 : PubMed
Esterase and deamidase activities at pH 7.0 and carboxypeptidase activity at pH 5.7 were markedly low or deficient in seven galactosialidosis fibroblast strains with deficient activity of "protective protein" for lysosomal beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase. No simultaneous deficiency of these three enzyme activities was observed in other lysosomal disease fibroblasts examined in this study. This result strongly suggests that "protective protein" is identical with a multifunctional protein with esterase/deamidase/carboxypeptidase activities and its mutation in galactosialidosis results in deficiency of these three enzyme activities.
        
Title: Inheritance of an ovine lysosomal storage disease associated with deficiencies of beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase Prieur DJ, Ahern-Rindell AJ, Murnane RD, Wright RW, Parish SM Ref: Journal of Heredity, 81:245, 1990 : PubMed
Prospective and retrospective genetic studies were performed on sheep with a recently described inherited lysosomal storage disease that involves a profound deficiency of beta-galactosidase and an associated deficiency of alpha-neuraminidase. Retrospective studies of the flock of sheep in which four affected lambs were born indicated little inbreeding but the presence of a common ram in both the maternal and paternal sides of the pedigrees. When unrelated rams were used in the flock in subsequent years, no affected lambs were born. The affected lambs' parents were phenotypically normal, so the disease was investigated as a putative autosomal recessive condition in prospective breedings of related sheep over two breeding seasons. For the third breeding season, heterozygous ewes were superovulated and bred to a heterozygous ram, and the resultant embryos were transferred to recipient ewes. Later in the same breeding season, the heterozygous ewes were re-bred naturally to the heterozygous ram. Lambs were identified as affected by the development of signs of ataxia, levels of beta-galactosidase that were less than 7% of the levels in controls by spectrofluorometric assay, or the histopathologic demonstration of vacuolization of neurons. Heterozygous sheep were identified by the production of affected offspring and/or by levels of beta-galactosidase in fibroblast cultures that were approximately 50% of control levels. The phenotypic ratio of affected sheep to normal sheep and the genotypic ratio of affected to heterozygous to normal sheep were consistent, by chi-square analysis, with an autosomal recessive trait. It was concluded that this ovine lysosomal storage disease is an autosomal recessive disease.
        
Title: Japanese-type adult galactosialidosis: a unique and common splice junction mutation causing exon skipping in the protective protein/carboxypeptidase gene Shimmoto M, Takano T, Fukuhara Y, Oshima A, Sakuraba H, Suzuki Y Ref: Proc Jpn Acad, 66B:217, 1990 : PubMed
Title: Combined deficiency of beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase: natural history of the disease in the first 18 years of an American patient with late infantile onset form Strisciuglio P, Sly WS, Dodson WE, McAlister WH, Martin TC Ref: American Journal of Medicine Genet, 37:573, 1990 : PubMed
We describe the clinical findings over the first 18 years of a patient with a novel phenotype for galactosialidosis, the storage disease produced by the combined deficiency of beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase. Clinical findings in the first few months included somewhat unusual appearance and hepatosplenomegaly. Dysostosis multiplex was evident by age 2 1/2 years. Mitral and aortic valvular disease appeared over the next few years and cardiac disease has become the most important clinical problem. Foam cells were present in the bone marrow, and vacuolated lymphocytes were present in the peripheral blood smear. The patient had no neurological symptoms, cherry red spots, or intellectual deterioration during the first 18 years. Evidence presented elsewhere indicates that the basic defect in this late infantile form of galactosialidosis (as is thought to be true for the other forms of galactosialidosis) is a reduced amount of the 32 kDa phosphoglycoprotein which associates with beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase in lysosomes.
        
Title: Interspecific genetic complementation analysis of human and sheep fibroblasts with beta-galactosidase deficiency. Ahern-Rindell AJ, Murnane RD, Prieur DJ Ref: Somat Cell Molec Genet, 15:382, 1989 : PubMed
Title: Interspecific genetic complementation analysis evidence that the lysosomal storage disease of sheep with deficiencies of beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase is due to a mutation of the beta-galactosidase structural gene. (Abstract) Prieur DJ, Ahern-Rindell AJ Ref: American Journal of Human Genetics, 45 (suppl.):A213 only, 1989 : PubMed
Histopathologic, ultrastructural and Golgi impregnation studies disclosed lesions characteristic of a neuronal lysosomal storage disease in related sheep with onset of neurologic signs at 4-6 months. Biochemical and enzymatic evaluation disclosed storage of GM1 ganglioside, asialo-GM1, and neutral long chain oligosaccharides in brain, urinary excretion of neutral long chain oligosaccharides, and deficiencies of lysosomal beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase. Retrospective and limited prospective genetic studies suggested autosomal recessive inheritance. A gene-dosage effect on beta-galactosidase levels was documented in fibroblasts from putative heterozygous sheep. Fibroblasts from affected sheep did not have increased beta-galactosidase activity after incubation with the protease inhibitor, leupeptin. In some aspects this disease is similar to GM1 gangliosidosis, but is unique in that a genetic defect in lysosomal beta-galactosidase may cause the deficiency of lysosomal alpha-neuraminidase.
We describe a 19-year-old white male with juvenile galactosialidosis. He presented with hip arthralgia and was found to have facial "coarseness," corneal clouding, mitral and aortic insufficiency, and hepatosplenomegaly. Ultrastructural studies of skin biopsy and peripheral blood lymphocytes showed membrane-bound inclusions containing sparse fibrillogranular material. Biochemical analysis showed elevated urinary sialyloligosaccharides and no free sialic acid. Fibroblast enzyme analysis showed low activities of both alpha-neuraminidase and beta-galactosidase. To date, most patients with juvenile galactosialidosis have been Japanese. However, unlike those patients, our patient did not have macular cherry-red spots, neurologic abnormalities, or mental retardation. We speculate that this young man represents a new subtype of juvenile galactosialidosis with a potentially different molecular defect from that of the Japanese variant.
The "protective protein" is a glycoprotein that associates with lysosomal beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase and is deficient in the autosomal recessive disorder galactosialidosis. We have isolated the cDNA encoding human "protective protein". The clone recognizes a 2 kb mRNA in normal cells that is not evident in fibroblasts of an early infantile galactosialidosis patient. The cDNA directs the synthesis of a 452 amino acid precursor molecule that is processed in vivo to yield mature "protective protein," a heterodimer of 32 kd and 20 kd polypeptides held together by disulfide bridges. This mature form is also biologically functional since it restores beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase activities in galactosialidosis cells. The predicted amino acid sequence of the "protective protein" bears homology to yeast carboxypeptidase Y and the KEX1 gene product. This suggests a protease activity for the "protective protein."
The biochemical defect underlying the late infantile form of galactosialidosis has been investigated in fibroblasts from two patients presenting with this phenotype. Immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated that a reduced amount of 32-kd "protective" protein and a normal amount of its precursor are present in late infantile galactosialidosis fibroblasts, while neither of the two polypeptides are detectable in early infantile and juvenile/adult fibroblasts. Leupeptin treatment led to a slight increase in the amount of 54-kd and 32-kd polypeptides in both late-infantile galactosialidosis cell lines. Uptake studies in one of the two cell lines confirmed the hypothesis that a block in the maturation of the protective protein is responsible for the late infantile type of galactosialidosis. This mutation seems to be a distinct finding in all patients affected by this form of the disease.
        
Title: Galactosialidosis: a direct evidence that a 46-kilodalton protein restores deficient enzyme activities in fibroblasts Nanba E, Tsuji A, Omura K, Suzuki Y Ref: Biochemical & Biophysical Research Communications, 144:138, 1987 : PubMed
The intracellular function of a specific protein to protect lysosomal beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase activities against proteases in human fibroblasts was studied. Beta-Galactosidase was purified from human placenta to different degrees; a preparation (A) contained also two concomitant proteins, and a highly purified preparation (B) contained only the mature beta-galactosidase. The protein concentrate of the culture medium of normal fibroblasts restored the activities of the deficient enzymes, beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase, in galactosialidosis cells. This effect was inhibited only by the anti-A anti-serum, and not by the anti-B antiserum. A 46-kilodalton protein, secreted from fibroblasts cultured in the presence of ammonium chloride, was detected again only by the anti-A antiserum, and not by the anti-B antiserum. It was concluded that this protein has a function to restore their activities in fibroblasts from galactosialidosis patients after being endocytosed from the culture medium.
        
Title: An inherited lysosomal storage disease of sheep associated with deficiencies of beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase. (Abstract) Ahern-Rindell AJ, Prieur DJ, Murnane RD Ref: American Journal of Human Genetics, 39:A3 only, 1986 : PubMed
Title: Sialidosis and galactosialidosis: chromosomal assignment of two genes associated with neuraminidase-deficiency disorders Mueller OT, Henry WM, Haley LL, Byers MG, Eddy RL, Shows TB Ref: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 83:1817, 1986 : PubMed
The inherited human disorders sialidosis and galactosialidosis are the result of deficiencies of glycoprotein-specific alpha-neuraminidase (acylneuraminyl hydrolase, EC 3.2.1.18; sialidase) activity. Two genes were determined to be necessary for expression of neuraminidase by using human-mouse somatic cell hybrids segregating human chromosomes. A panel of mouse RAG-human hybrid cells demonstrated a single-gene requirement for human neuraminidase and allowed assignment of this gene to the (pter----q23) region of chromosome 10. A second panel of mouse thymidine kinase (TK)-deficient LM/TK- -human hybrid cells demonstrated that human neuraminidase activity required both chromosomes 10 and 20 to be present. Analysis of human neuraminidase expression in interspecific hybrid cells or polykaryocytes formed from fusion of mouse RAG (hypoxanthine/guanine phosphoribosyltransferase deficient) or LM/TK- cell lines with human sialidosis or galactosialidosis fibroblasts indicated that the RAG cell line complemented the galactosialidosis defect, but the LM/TK- cell line did not. This eliminates the requirement for this gene in RAG-human hybrid cells and explains the different chromosome requirements of these two hybrid panels. Fusion of LM/TK- cell hybrids lacking chromosome 10 or 20 (phenotype 10+,20- and 10-,20+) and neuraminidase-deficient fibroblasts confirmed by complementation analysis that the sialidosis disorder results from a mutation on chromosome 10, presumably encoding the neuraminidase structural gene. Galactosialidosis is caused by a mutation in a second gene required for neuraminidase expression located on chromosome 20.
        
Title: Galactosialidosis: molecular heterogeneity among distinct clinical phenotypes Palmeri S, Hoogeveen AT, Verheijen FW, Galjaard H Ref: American Journal of Human Genetics, 38:137, 1986 : PubMed
The lysosomal storage disorder galactosialidosis has been recognized as a distinct genetic and biochemical entity, associated with a combined beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase deficiency that is due to the lack of a 32-kilodalton (kDa) glycoprotein. The molecular basis of different clinical variants of galactosialidosis has been investigated. In the early-infantile form, the synthesis of the 52-kDa precursor of the 32-kDa "protective protein" is markedly reduced and the absence of the latter protein explains the severe neuraminidase deficiency. In the juvenile-adult form, there is relatively more 52-kDa precursor but no 32-kDa protein can be detected. Cells from the late-infantile form have in comparison with controls, besides a small amount of the 32-kDa glycoprotein, an accumulation of the 52-kDa precursor. Apparently, this protein is genetically altered in such a way that its further processing is impaired. Furthermore, in this mutant, the residual neuraminidase activity is stimulated four- to sixfold upon leupeptin treatment together with an increase of the 32-kDa glycoprotein.
        
Title: Galactosialidosis: low beta-galactosidase activity in serum after long-term clotting Sakuraba H, Iimori Y, Suzuki Y, Kint JA, Akagi M Ref: Annals of Neurology, 18:261, 1985 : PubMed
Serum beta-galactosidase activity was found to be markedly increased in clotting blood from normal subjects, but patients with galactosialidosis showed only a slight increase of this enzyme activity. Consequently, the beta-galactosidase activity was low in serum after long-term clotting in patients with this disease. The mechanism of the enzyme activation is unknown. The use of anticoagulants completely inhibited the activation.
        
Title: The chromosomal localization of human beta-galactosidase revisited: a locus for beta-galactosidase on human chromosome 3 and for its protective protein on human chromosome 22 Sips HJ, de Wit-Verbeek HA, De Wit J, Westerveld A, Galjaard H Ref: Hum Genet, 69:340, 1985 : PubMed
A series of man-Chinese hamster and man-mouse somatic cell hybrids was investigated to study the localization of the genes coding for the human lysosomal enzyme beta-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.23) and for its protective protein. Using a monoclonal antibody, raised against human placental beta-galactosidase, it was observed that the structural locus for the beta-galactosidase polypeptide is located on chromosome 3. The nature of the involvement of chromosome 22 in the expression of human beta-galactosidase was elucidated by metabolic labelling of the hybrids with radioactive amino acids, immunoprecipitation with monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies against beta-galactosidase, followed by analysis via gel electrophoresis and fluorography. The data show that the presence of chromosome 22 coincides with the presence of a 32 kd protein. This polypeptide, the "protective protein" was previously shown to be intimately associated with human beta-galactosidase. In addition, the protective protein was found to be essential for the in vivo stability of beta-galactosidase by aggregating beta-galactosidase monomers into high molecular weight multimers. Both chromosome 3 and 22 are therefore necessary to obtain normal levels of beta-galactosidase activity in human cells.
This study was undertaken to elucidate ultrastructural changes in a severe infantile sialidosis. The materials examined in this study consisted of biopsied rectal mucosa and autopsied small intestine, liver and kidney. In the biopsy sample, axons contained a number of pleomorphic electron dense bodies, and numerous membrane-bound vacuoles were found in Schwann's cells, fibroblasts, endothelial cells, lymphocytes and plasma cells. In autopsy samples, neurons in Auerbach's myenteric plexus of the small intestine were filled with a number of membranous cytoplasmic bodies, pleomorphic dense bodies and vesicles containing dense materials. Hepatocytes in the liver, and glomerular and tubular epithelial cells in the kidney were also extended by a number of membrane-bound vacuoles. These ultrastructural changes in severe infantile sialidosis closely resemble those in GM1-gangliosidosis type 1.
        
Title: beta-Galactosidase and neuraminidase deficiency associated with angiokeratoma corporis diffusum Ishibashi A, Tsuboi R, Shinmei M Ref: Arch Dermatol, 120:1344, 1984 : PubMed
A 17-year-old Japanese boy was found to have ataxia, generalized angiokeratomas, skeletal deformities, visual impairment, and macular cherry-red spots, without hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, or renal failure. Laboratory examination disclosed a deficiency of beta-galactosidase as well as of neuraminidase activity in the leukocytes and fibroblasts, while alpha-galactosidase and alpha-L-fucosidase activities were normal. On electron microscopic examination, numerous cytoplasmic vacuoles containing flocculated material were found in the vascular endothelial cells, histiocytes, perineurial cells, and Schwann's cells.
        
Title: Combined sialidase (neuraminidase) and beta-galactosidase deficiency. Clinical, morphological and enzymological observations in a patient Loonen MC, Reuser AJ, Visser P, Arts WF Ref: Clin Genet, 26:139, 1984 : PubMed
A patient with combined deficiency of sialidase and beta-galactosidase is described. This now 39-year-old man, who is of Japanese origin, showed gradually progressive clinical features from the age of six years. Many of these features are commonly found in sialidosis type 2 or in GM1-gangliosidosis. Both sialidase and beta-galactosidase activities were deficient in leucocytes and cultured fibroblasts. Leucocytes of his mother showed activities of both enzymes in the lower limit of the control range. Morphologically, the pattern of storage products in a skin biopsy resembled in many respects that seen in GM1-gangliosidosis. Moreover, storage products which could be typical of sialidosis were also observed. Since the patient showed angiokeratomata, the morphological findings were compared with those specific to Fabry's disease, but no similarities were found. An enzymological diagnosis of the disease is most reliable on cultured fibroblasts, discriminating it from sialidosis type 2 and GM1-gangliosidosis. In view of recent findings, leucocytes seem to be less suitable for the establishment of the diagnosis galactosialidosis.
        
Title: Identification and chromosome location of genes involved in glycoprotein neuraminidase deficiency disorders. (Abstract) Mueller OT, Henry WM, Haley LL, Byers MG, Eddy RL, Shows TB Ref: American Journal of Human Genetics, 36:205S only, 1984 : PubMed
Title: Complementation, cross correction, and drug correction studies of combined beta-galactosidase neuraminidase deficiency in human fibroblasts Strisciuglio P, Creek KE, Sly WS Ref: Pediatr Res, 18:167, 1984 : PubMed
Neuraminidase activity in fibroblasts obtained from a patient with combined beta-galactosidase-neuraminidase deficiency (beta-gal-/neur-) was partially restored by fusion with two ML I cell lines and an ML II cell line. As observed with neuraminidase activity, beta-galactosidase also showed complementation with an increase in activity when beta-gal-/neur- fibroblasts were fused with an ML II or a GMI gangliosidosis cell line. Both GMI gangliosidosis and sialidosis fibroblasts secreted a "corrective factor" which, when added to medium above beta-gal-/neur- fibroblasts, was pinocytosed and partially corrected its deficiencies for these two enzymes. This partial correction of beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase activities persisted for at least 72 h after removal of the "corrective factor" from the medium. A "corrective factor" with similar properties was obtained from glycoproteins isolated by chromatography of human spleen homogenates on concanavalin A-Sepharose. Treatment of beta-gal-/neur- fibroblasts with leupeptin or EP475, two inhibitors of lysosomal thiol-proteases, partially restored beta-galactosidase activity but caused no significant improvement in neuraminidase levels. The partial corrective effect of leupeptin on beta-galactosidase activity persisted for at least 2 d after removal of the drug, even in the presence of cycloheximide.
        
Title: Presence of activator proteins for the enzymic hydrolysis of GM1 and GM2 gangliosides in normal human urine Li YT, Muhiudeen IA, DeGasperi R, Hirabayashi Y, Li SC Ref: American Journal of Human Genetics, 35:629, 1983 : PubMed
Normal human urine has been found to contain activator proteins that stimulate the enzymic hydrolysis of GM1 and GM2 gangliosides. These two activators were partially purified by Sephadex G-200 filtration and DEAE-Sephadex A-50 chromatography. The presence of these two activators was assayed by demonstrating the stimulation of the in vitro hydrolysis of GM1 and GM2 gangliosides. As little as 50 ml of urine is sufficient to detect the presence of these two activators. The crude activator preparation from normal urine was also found to stimulate the hydrolysis of galactosylceramide sulfate by arylsulfatase A.
In normal human fibroblasts, an enzymically active 85,000-dalton precursor form of beta-galactosidase is processed, via a number of intermediates, into a mature 64,000-dalton form. In addition there is an enzymically inactive 32,000-dalton component and its 54,000-dalton precursor. In fibroblasts from patients with a combined deficiency of beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase these last two components are absent and hardly any mature beta-galactosidase can be demonstrated. Nevertheless, in the mutant fibroblasts, precursor beta-galactosidase is synthesized and processed normally. The excessive intralysosomal degradation that is responsible for the deficiency of mature beta-galactosidase can be partially corrected by addition of the protease inhibitor leupeptin, which results in the accumulation of 85,000-dalton precursor beta-galactosidase and of a partially processed 66,000-dalton form. When mutant cells were grown in the presence of a "corrective factor" purified from the medium of NH4Cl-stimulated cell cultures, both beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase activities were restored to low control levels. The immunoprecipitation pattern was completely normal after addition of the corrective factor, and mature 64,000-dalton beta-galactosidase accumulated in the mutant fibroblasts. We propose that the combined beta-galactosidase/neuraminidase deficiency is caused by a defective 32,000-dalton glycoprotein which is normally required to protect beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase against excessive intralysosomal degradation and to give these enzymes their full hydrolytic activity.
        
Title: Human beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase deficient mucolipidosis: genetic complementation analysis of the neuraminidase deficiency Mueller OT, Shows TB Ref: Hum Genet, 60:158, 1982 : PubMed
Human beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase deficient mucolipidosis [ML(gal-neur-)] is an inherited lysosomal enzymopathy which recently was designated as a sialidosis. We analyzed the neuraminidase deficiency of this disorder with genetic complementation analyses using a heterokaryon enrichment procedure. The genetic defects of two apparent variants of this disorder complemented the defects of the neuraminidase deficiency diseases, sialidosis I and mucolipidosis I, resulting in the restoration of neuraminidase activity in heterokaryons. The neuraminidase deficiency, therefore, may not be the primary defect in ML(gal-neur-) and is not an appropriate test for determining carrier status. The clinical and biochemical characteristics of this disorder suggest that a post-translational or processing event for these enzymes may be defective. The defect, however, is different from I-cell disease and pseudo-Hurler polydystrophy, two disorders of post-translational lysosomal enzyme biosynthesis, since complementation studies demonstrated recovery of intracellular beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase levels in heterokaryons. The lack of human beta-galactosidase expression in man-mouse somatic cell hybrids formed from fibroblasts of the infantile onset type disorder suggests that the defect is not corrected by the mouse genome. The ML(gal-neur-) disorder therefore appears to be a distinct subtype of the inherited neuraminidase deficiencies in which the defect mat occur in a post-translational or regulatory step which coordinately affects the expression of lysosomal beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase.
        
Title: Correction of combined beta-galactosidase/neuraminidase deficiency in human fibroblasts Hoogeveen A, d'Azzo A, Brossmer R, Galjaard H Ref: Biochemical & Biophysical Research Communications, 103:292, 1981 : PubMed
Title: Combined deficiency of beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase: three affected siblings in a French family Maire I, Nivelon-Chevallier AR Ref: J Inherit Metab Dis, 4:221, 1981 : PubMed
Three affected siblings from France have been described with a combined deficiency of beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase. Oligosaccharides were found in urine and the enzyme activities determined in leukocytes and cultured fibroblasts. Further characterization of the defect in this family is needed.
        
Title: Beta-galactosidase-neuraminidase deficiency: restoration of beta-galactosidase activity by protease inhibitors Suzuki Y, Sakuraba H, Hayashi K, Suzuki K, Imahori K Ref: J Biochem, 90:271, 1981 : PubMed
Beta-Galactosidase was partially restored by protease inhibitors, leupeptin, chymostatin and E-64 in cultured fibroblasts from three patients with beta-galactosidase-neuraminidase deficiency. Pepstatin did not activate this enzyme. Neuraminidase was not affected by any of these compounds in the culture medium. It was concluded that the activating effect was produced by a specific inhibition of thiol proteases.
        
Title: beta-Galactosidase-neuraminidase deficiency in adults: deficiency of a freeze-labile neuraminidase in leukocytes and fibroblasts Suzuki Y, Sakuraba H, Potier M, Akagi M, Sakai M, Beppu H Ref: Hum Genet, 58:387, 1981 : PubMed
4-methylumbelliferyl neuraminidase activity was studied in fibroblasts, leukocytes, and frozen tissues from adult patients with beta-galactosidase-neuraminidase deficiency and specific clinical manifestations. This enzyme was almost completely deficient in fibroblasts, but the residual activity was relatively high (20% of the control mean) in the leukocytes from the patients. The frozen liver from one patient showed the enzyme activity as high as controls. This enzyme consisted of two components, freeze-labile and freeze-stable, and it was demonstrated that only the labile enzyme was deficient in fibroblasts and leukocytes. The apparently normal activity of neuraminidase in frozen autopsy tissues of a patient may be explained by the loss of the labile component in control tissues after a long-term freezing. The neuraminidase activity was variable in parents and no definite conclusion was drawn on the hereditary nature of the disease.
        
Title: The genetic defect in the various types of human beta-galactosidase deficiency Hoeksema HL, De Wit J, Westerveld A Ref: Hum Genet, 53:241, 1980 : PubMed
There is a deficiency of human alpha-N-acetylneuraminidase in several inherited diseases. In patients with mucolipidosis I (refs 1,2) and in adults with a variant form with out bony abnormalities and mental retardation, both also classified as sialidoses, it is the only deficient enzyme. In mucolipidosis II ('I-cell' disease) neuraminidase is one of many deficient lysosomal hydrolases and a third manifestation combines deficiency of neuraminidase and beta-galactosidase. We have investigated the genetic background of these various neuraminindase deficiencies by somatic cell hybridization and co-cultivation. The principal conclusions from work on mutant fibroblasts, reported here, are that at least three gene mutations are involved and that the combined beta-galactosidase/neuraminidase deficiency is likely to be due to defective post-translational modification of these enzymes.
        
Title: Sialidosis: a review of human neuraminidase deficiency Lowden JA, O'Brien JS Ref: American Journal of Human Genetics, 31:1, 1979 : PubMed
Homogenates of cultured skin fibroblasts from a non-ambulatory, 20-year-old male with cherry-red spots, corneal clouding, seizures, mental retardation, dysostosis multiplex, dwarfism, coarse facies and loss of vision, originally described by Goldberg et al. (1971), have diminished neuraminidase activity and an excess of neuraminic acid-rich compounds. Specifically, these cells have 2-17% normal neuraminidase when measured with 2-(3' methoxyphenyl)-N-acetyl-alpha-neuraminic acid, N-acetyl-neuramin-lactose and fetuin. Activities of 12 other lysosomal enzymes were either at or above the range of normal control fibroblasts. Total neuraminic acid concentration was 44.3 nmol/mg protein versus an average control value of 14.2. It is concluded that the Goldberg syndrome should be considered, along with mucolipidosis I and the cherry-red spot -- myoclonus syndrome, as resulting from a primary neuraminidase deficiency.
        
Title: Assignment of structural beta-galactosidase loci to human chromosomes 3 and 22. (Abstract) De Wit J, Hoeksema HL, Bootsma D, Westerveld A Ref: Cytogenet Cell Genet, 25:217 only, 1979 : PubMed
Title: Macular cherry-red spots and myoclonus with dementia: coexistent neuraminidase and beta-galactosidase deficiencies Wenger DA, Tarby TJ, Wharton C Ref: Biochemical & Biophysical Research Communications, 82:589, 1978 : PubMed
Human white blood cells with an X/22 translocation [46, XX, t(X;22)(q23;q13)] were fused with Chinese hamster cells. The isolated hybrids were analyzed for human chromosomes and 21 enzyme markers. An electrophoretic technique for studying the beta-galactosidase isoenzymes in man-Chinese hamster hybrid cells was developed. Immunological studies showed that the beta-galactosidase marker studied in these hybrids did contain immunological determinants of human origin. Furthermore the results provided evidence that a locus for beta-galactosidase is situated on chromosome 22 distal to the breakpoint in q13.
        
Title: beta-Galactosidase deficiency in juvenile and adult patients. Report of six Japanese cases and review of literature Suzuki Y, Nakamura N, Fukuoka K, Shimada Y, Uono M Ref: Hum Genet, 36:219, 1977 : PubMed
Six juvenile and adult patients with progressive neurological diseases and beta-galactosidase deficiency were reported. Any diseases known to date were denied. These cases together with ten case reports in the literature were reviewed and were classified into three groups from clinical and biochemical points. Group 1 patients were characterized by progressive ataxia and myoclonus with gargoyl changes and macular cherry-red spots. In this syndrome beta-galactosidase activity seems to be secondarily affected by other biochemical defects. A group 2 patient showed similar neurological manifestations without gargoyle changes or macular cherry-red spots. Patients with these clinical features not associated with beta-galactosidase deficiency have also been described in the literature. Group 3 patients had progressive pyramidal and extrapyramidal disease without gargoyl changes or macular cherry-red spots. These cases may represent juvenile and adult type GM1-gangliosidosis. Accumulation of GM1 has not yet been demonstrated.
        
Title: Macular cherry-red spots and beta-galactosidase deficiency in an adult. An autopsy case with progressive cerebellar ataxia, myoclonus, thrombocytopathy, and accumulation of polysaccharide in liver Suzuki Y, Nakamura N, Shimada Y, Yotsumoto H, Endo H, Nagashima K Ref: Archives of Neurology, 34:157, 1977 : PubMed
An adult patient with macular cherry-red spots, a gargoyle-like physical appearance, cerebellar ataxia, myoclonus, convulsive seizures, and pyramidal tract signs showed a profound deficiency of beta-galactosidase in liver and brain. Thrombocytopathy of undetermined etiology was evident since childhood, and the patient died of intracranial bleeding at age 22. Cerebral ganglioside pattern was normal. Hepatic mucopolysaccharides were not increased. GM1-gangliosidosis and mucopolysaccharidosis were ruled out by those analytical data. However, a large amount of amylopectin-like polysaccharide was found to be accumulated in liver. Hepatocyte contained numerous inclusion bodies with granulofibrillary structure similar to Lafora bodies, corpora amylacea, and inclusion bodies in glycogenosis type IV. This case seems to represent a new inborn metabolic disease closely related to GM1-gangliosidosis and mucopolysaccharidosis. The primary metabolic defect is not known at present.
        
Title: Localized beta-galactosidase deficiency. Occurrence in cerebellar ataxia with myoclonus epilepsy and macular cherry-red spot--a new variant of GM1-gangliosidosis? Yamamoto A, Adachi S, Kawamura S, Takahashi M, Kitani T Ref: Archives of Internal Medicine, 134:627, 1974 : PubMed
Title: Macular cherry-red spot, corneal clouding, and beta-galactosidase deficiency. Clinical, biochemical, and electron microscopic study of a new autosomal recessive storage disease Goldberg MF, Cotlier E, Fichenscher LG, Kenyon K, Enat R, Borowsky SA Ref: Archives of Internal Medicine, 128:387, 1971 : PubMed