Ashton L J, Brooks D A, McCourt P A, Muller V J, Clements P R, Hopwood J J
Department of Chemical Pathology, Adelaide Children's Hospital, North Adelaide, Australia.
Am J Hum Genet. 1992 Apr;50(4):787-94.
alpha-L-Iduronidase activity is deficient in mucopolysaccharidosis type I (MPS I; Hurler syndrome, Scheie syndrome) patients and results in the disruption of the sequential degradation of the glycosaminoglycans dermatan sulfate and heparan sulfate. A monoclonal antibody-based immunoquantification assay has been developed for alpha-L-iduronidase, which enables the detection of at least 16 pg alpha-L-iduronidase protein. Cultured human skin fibroblasts from 12 normal controls contained 17-54 ng alpha-L-iduronidase protein/mg extracted cell protein. Fibroblasts from 23 MPS I patients were assayed for alpha-L-iduronidase protein content. Fibroblast extracts from one MPS I patient contained at least six times the level of alpha-L-iduronidase protein for normal controls--but contained no associated enzyme activity--and is proposed to represent a mutation affecting the active site of the enzyme. Fibroblast extracts from 11 MPS I patients contained 0.05-2.03 ng alpha-L-iduronidase protein/mg extracted cell protein, whereas immunodetectable protein could not be detected in the other 11 patients. Four fibroblast extracts with no immunodetectable alpha-L-iduronidase protein had residual alpha-L-iduronidase activity, suggesting that the mutant alpha-L-iduronidase in cultured cells from these MPS I patients has been modified to mask or remove the epitopes detected by two monoclonal antibodies used in the quantification assay. Both the absence of immunoreactivity in a mild MPS I patient and high protein level in a severe MPS I patient present limitations to the use of immunoquantification analysis as a sole measure of patient phenotype. Enzyme kinetic analysis of alpha-L-iduronidase from MPS I fibroblasts revealed a number of patients with either abnormal substrate binding or catalytic activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
α-L-艾杜糖醛酸酶活性在黏多糖贮积症I型(MPS I;Hurler综合征、Scheie综合征)患者中缺乏,导致糖胺聚糖硫酸皮肤素和硫酸乙酰肝素的顺序降解受到破坏。已开发出一种基于单克隆抗体的α-L-艾杜糖醛酸酶免疫定量测定法,该方法能够检测至少16 pg的α-L-艾杜糖醛酸酶蛋白。来自12名正常对照的培养人皮肤成纤维细胞含有17 - 54 ng α-L-艾杜糖醛酸酶蛋白/毫克提取的细胞蛋白。对23名MPS I患者的成纤维细胞进行了α-L-艾杜糖醛酸酶蛋白含量检测。一名MPS I患者的成纤维细胞提取物中α-L-艾杜糖醛酸酶蛋白水平至少是正常对照的六倍,但未检测到相关酶活性,推测这代表一种影响酶活性位点的突变。11名MPS I患者的成纤维细胞提取物含有0.05 - 2.03 ng α-L-艾杜糖醛酸酶蛋白/毫克提取的细胞蛋白,而在其他11名患者中未检测到可免疫检测的蛋白。四份未检测到可免疫检测的α-L-艾杜糖醛酸酶蛋白的成纤维细胞提取物具有残余的α-L-艾杜糖醛酸酶活性,这表明这些MPS I患者培养细胞中的突变α-L-艾杜糖醛酸酶已被修饰,以掩盖或去除定量测定中使用的两种单克隆抗体检测到的表位。轻度MPS I患者缺乏免疫反应性以及重度MPS I患者蛋白水平高,这都限制了将免疫定量分析作为患者表型的唯一测量方法的应用。对MPS I成纤维细胞的α-L-艾杜糖醛酸酶进行酶动力学分析发现,许多患者存在底物结合或催化活性异常。(摘要截短于250字)