Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine (BCM), Houston, TX, United States of America.
Texas Children's Hospital, Houston TX, United States of America.
PLoS Genet. 2017 Jun 22;13(6):e1006825. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006825. eCollection 2017 Jun.
Peroxisome biogenesis disorders (PBD) are a group of multi-system human diseases due to mutations in the PEX genes that are responsible for peroxisome assembly and function. These disorders lead to global defects in peroxisomal function and result in severe brain, liver, bone and kidney disease. In order to study their pathogenesis we undertook a systematic genetic and biochemical study of Drosophila pex16 and pex2 mutants. These mutants are short-lived with defects in locomotion and activity. Moreover these mutants exhibit severe morphologic and functional peroxisomal defects. Using metabolomics we uncovered defects in multiple biochemical pathways including defects outside the canonical specialized lipid pathways performed by peroxisomal enzymes. These included unanticipated changes in metabolites in glycolysis, glycogen metabolism, and the pentose phosphate pathway, carbohydrate metabolic pathways that do not utilize known peroxisomal enzymes. In addition, mutant flies are starvation sensitive and are very sensitive to glucose deprivation exhibiting dramatic shortening of lifespan and hyperactivity on low-sugar food. We use bioinformatic transcriptional profiling to examine gene co-regulation between peroxisomal genes and other metabolic pathways and we observe that the expression of peroxisomal and carbohydrate pathway genes in flies and mouse are tightly correlated. Indeed key steps in carbohydrate metabolism were found to be strongly co-regulated with peroxisomal genes in flies and mice. Moreover mice lacking peroxisomes exhibit defective carbohydrate metabolism at the same key steps in carbohydrate breakdown. Our data indicate an unexpected link between these two metabolic processes and suggest metabolism of carbohydrates could be a new therapeutic target for patients with PBD.
过氧化物酶体生物发生障碍(PBD)是一组多系统人类疾病,由于过氧化物酶体装配和功能所必需的 PEX 基因突变所致。这些疾病导致过氧化物酶体功能的全面缺陷,从而导致严重的脑、肝、骨和肾病。为了研究它们的发病机制,我们对果蝇 pex16 和 pex2 突变体进行了系统的遗传和生化研究。这些突变体的寿命较短,运动和活动能力有缺陷。此外,这些突变体表现出严重的形态和功能过氧化物酶体缺陷。通过代谢组学研究,我们发现了多种生化途径的缺陷,包括过氧化物酶体酶所执行的经典专门脂质途径之外的缺陷。这包括糖酵解、糖原代谢和戊糖磷酸途径中代谢物的意外变化,这些途径不利用已知的过氧化物酶体酶。此外,突变体果蝇对饥饿敏感,对葡萄糖缺乏非常敏感,表现出寿命显著缩短和低糖食物下过度活跃。我们使用生物信息学转录谱分析研究过氧化物酶体基因和其他代谢途径之间的基因协同调控,我们观察到果蝇和小鼠中过氧化物酶体和碳水化合物途径基因的表达密切相关。事实上,在果蝇和小鼠中,碳水化合物代谢的关键步骤被发现与过氧化物酶体基因强烈协同调控。此外,缺乏过氧化物酶体的小鼠在碳水化合物分解的相同关键步骤中表现出碳水化合物代谢缺陷。我们的数据表明这两种代谢过程之间存在意想不到的联系,并表明碳水化合物代谢可能成为 PBD 患者的新治疗靶点。