Timson David J
School of Biological Sciences, Queen's University Belfast, Medical Biology Centre, Belfast, UK.
IUBMB Life. 2006 Feb;58(2):83-9. doi: 10.1080/15216540600644846.
Type III galactosemia is a genetic disease caused by mutations in the gene encoding UDP-galactose 4-epimerase. A variety of different point mutations located throughout the gene can be responsible. The main, disease-causing effects of these mutations appear to be a reduction in the catalytic rate constant (kcat) and an increase in the proteolytic sensitivity of the protein. Many of the mutations are distant from the active site of the enzyme and therefore must be assumed to affect the overall fold of the protein. Although the disease was previously classified into a severe, or generalized, form and an essentially benign, or peripheral, form this distinction has been blurred by recent work. Instead of two separate conditions it now appears that type III galactosemia is a continuum and that the symptoms will vary depending on the mutation(s) carried by the individual sufferer. This new way of looking at the disease has implications for the treatment and long term monitoring of patients.
III型半乳糖血症是一种由编码UDP-半乳糖4-表异构酶的基因突变引起的遗传性疾病。该基因中遍布各种不同的点突变都可能是病因。这些突变的主要致病作用似乎是催化速率常数(kcat)降低以及蛋白质的蛋白水解敏感性增加。许多突变距离酶的活性位点较远,因此必须假定它们会影响蛋白质的整体折叠。尽管该疾病以前被分为严重的或全身性的形式以及基本良性的或外周性的形式,但最近的研究使这种区分变得模糊。现在看来,III型半乳糖血症不是两种独立的病症,而是一个连续体,症状将根据个体患者携带的突变而有所不同。这种看待该疾病的新方式对患者的治疗和长期监测具有重要意义。