996 resultados para Urea cycle
Resumo:
Molecular genetic testing is commonly used to confirm clinical diagnoses of inherited urea cycle disorders (UCDs); however, conventional mutation screenings encompassing only the coding regions of genes may not detect disease-causing mutations occurring in regulatory elements and introns. Microarray-based target enrichment and next-generation sequencing now allow more-comprehensive genetic screening. We applied this approach to UCDs and combined it with the use of DNA bar codes for more cost-effective, parallel analyses of multiple samples.
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Urea cycle disorders (UCDs) are inherited disorders of ammonia detoxification often regarded as mainly of relevance to pediatricians. Based on an increasing number of case studies it has become obvious that a significant number of UCD patients are affected by their disease in a non-classical way: presenting outside the newborn period, following a mild course, presenting with unusual clinical features, or asymptomatic patients with only biochemical signs of a UCD. These patients are surviving into adolescence and adulthood, rendering this group of diseases clinically relevant to adult physicians as well as pediatricians. In preparation for an international workshop we collected data on all patients with non-classical UCDs treated by the participants in 20 European metabolic centres. Information was collected on a cohort of 208 patients 50% of which were ≥ 16 years old. The largest subgroup (121 patients) had X-linked ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (OTCD) of whom 83 were female and 29% of these were asymptomatic. In index patients, there was a mean delay from first symptoms to diagnosis of 1.6 years. Cognitive impairment was present in 36% of all patients including female OTCD patients (in 31%) and those 41 patients identified presymptomatically following positive newborn screening (in 12%). In conclusion, UCD patients with non-classical clinical presentations require the interest and care of adult physicians and have a high risk of neurological complications. To improve the outcome of UCDs, a greater awareness by health professionals of the importance of hyperammonemia and UCDs, and ultimately avoidance of the still long delay to correctly diagnose the patients, is crucial.
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Argininosuccinic aciduria (ASA) is an autosomal recessive urea cycle disorder caused by deficiency of argininosuccinate lyase (ASL) with a wide clinical spectrum from asymptomatic to severe hyperammonemic neonatal onset life-threatening courses. We investigated the role of ASL transcript variants in the clinical and biochemical variability of ASA. Recombinant proteins for ASL wild type, mutant p.E189G, and the frequently occurring transcript variants with exon 2 or 7 deletions were (co-)expressed in human embryonic kidney 293T cells. We found that exon 2-deleted ASL forms a stable truncated protein with no relevant activity but a dose-dependent dominant negative effect on enzymatic activity after co-expression with wild type or mutant ASL, whereas exon 7-deleted ASL is unstable but seems to have, nevertheless, a dominant negative effect on mutant ASL. These findings were supported by structural modeling predictions for ASL heterotetramer/homotetramer formation. Illustrating the physiological relevance, the predominant occurrence of exon 7-deleted ASL was found in two patients who were both heterozygous for the ASL mutant p.E189G. Our results suggest that ASL transcripts can contribute to the highly variable phenotype in ASA patients if expressed at high levels. Especially, the exon 2-deleted ASL variant may form a heterotetramer with wild type or mutant ASL, causing markedly reduced ASL activity.
Resumo:
Urea cycle disorders (UCD) are due to defects of any of its six enzymes or two transporters. The definitive diagnosis of defects of the three mitochondrial enzymes, N-acetylglutamate synthase (NAGS), carbamylphosphate synthetase I (CPS1) and ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) depends on either molecular mutation analysis or measurement of enzyme activity, whereas the diagnosis of deficiencies of the three cytosolic enzymes argininosuccinate synthetase (ASS), argininosuccinate lyase (ASL) and arginase I (ARG1) is usually straightforward, based on marker metabolites. Enzyme assays for all UCD have been used since their first description, for disease confirmation and in some instances even for prenatal diagnosis. The genetic bases of the UCD have only been unraveled from the 1980s; the last gene cloned being the NAGS gene in 2002. In this review we discuss the enzymatic assays for all urea cycle enzymes from a historical perspective, their potential and drawbacks, and the current role of enzymatic analysis in UCD in general.
Resumo:
Loss of function of the urea cycle enzyme argininosuccinate lyase (ASL) is caused by mutations in the ASL gene leading to ASL deficiency (ASLD). ASLD has a broad clinical spectrum ranging from life-threatening severe neonatal to asymptomatic forms. Different levels of residual ASL activity probably contribute to the phenotypic variability but reliable expression systems allowing clinically useful conclusions are not yet available. In order to define the molecular characteristics underlying the phenotypic variability, we investigated all ASL mutations that were hitherto identified in patients with late onset or mild clinical and biochemical courses by ASL expression in human embryonic kidney 293 T cells. We found residual activities >3 % of ASL wild type (WT) in nine of 11 ASL mutations. Six ASL mutations (p.Arg95Cys, p.Ile100Thr, p.Val178Met, p.Glu189Gly, p.Val335Leu, and p.Arg379Cys) with residual activities ≥16 % of ASL WT showed no significant or less than twofold reduced Km values, but displayed thermal instability. Computational structural analysis supported the biochemical findings by revealing multiple effects including protein instability, disruption of ionic interactions and hydrogen bonds between residues in the monomeric form of the protein, and disruption of contacts between adjacent monomeric units in the ASL tetramer. These findings suggest that the clinical and biochemical course in variant forms of ASLD is associated with relevant residual levels of ASL activity as well as instability of mutant ASL proteins. Since about 30 % of known ASLD genotypes are affected by mutations studied here, ASLD should be considered as a candidate for chaperone treatment to improve mutant protein stability.
Resumo:
The seeds of Lathyrus sativus contain the unusual amino acid homoarginine. The possible breakdown of homoarginine to lysine and urea has been investigated with enzyme extracts prepared from the seedlings of L. sativus. The results indicate that there is no separate homoarginase enzyme but that the arginase present has about 5 per cent activity towards Image -homoarginine as compared to that obtained with Image -arginine. The enzyme does not show an absolute dependence on Mn2+ for activity and maximal activation of the enzyme has been realized with Fe3+. It is concluded that the breakdown of homoarginine through the urea cycle may only represent a minor pathway for the catabolism of this compound in this plant.
Resumo:
A depressão é uma doença grave que vem se tornando mais prevalente na população mundial e no Brasil. Segundo a Organização Mundial de Saúde (OMS), é a quarta doença mais incapacitante e estima-se que em 2020 ocupe o segundo lugar, ficando atrás apenas das doenças cardiovasculares (DCV), que são a principal causa de morte no mundo. O Transtorno depressivo maior (TDM) se caracteriza por humor deprimido, tristeza intensa ou desânimo ou perda de interesse ou de prazer por quase todas as atividades por, pelo menos, duas semanas. Além disso, tem um elevado índice de mortalidade cardiovascular, e esta associação parece ser multifatorial e altamente complexa, e ainda não está completamente elucidada. Recentes estudos sugerem que a ocorrência de aterotrombose e eventos cardiovasculares no TDM está associada a uma diminuição na biodisponibilidade do óxido nítrico (NO), um potente vasodilatador, anti-agregante plaquetário e neurotransmissor. O NO é um gás formado a partir da L-arginina, pela ação da família de enzimas NO sintases (NOS), e vai ocasionar um aumento de guanosina monofosfato cíclica (GMPc), que é posteriormente degradada pelas fosfodiesterases (PDE). A L-arginina participa em outras vias além da produção de NO, como a arginase. O estresse oxidativo também tem uma participação no desenvolvimento dos transtornos psiquiátricos e nas DCV, e pode reduzir a meia-vida do NO. O objetivo deste estudo é investigar a via NO-GMPc, o ciclo da uréia, marcadores de estresse oxidativo e de inflamação em plaquetas e a sua associação com a função plaquetária no TDM. Participaram da pesquisa nove pacientes com diagnóstico de depressão leve a moderada do Serviço de Psicologia Aplicada (SPA/UERJ) e onze indivíduos saudáveis pareados por idade como controles. Este projeto foi aprovado pelo Comitê de Ética e Pesquisa do Hospital Universitário Pedro Ernesto (1436-CEP/HUPE). A agregação plaquetária, a expressão e atividade da arginase II, a expressão da PDE 5, marcadores de estresse oxidativo (níveis de TBARS, carbonilação de proteínas, expressão da NADPH oxidase e da glutationa peroxidase (GPx) e atividade desta e da catalase (CAT), ambas enzimas anti-oxidantes) nas plaquetas e no soro, e o fibrinogênio sistêmico foram investigados. No presente estudo observou-se um aumento da agregação plaquetária induzida por ADP em pacientes com TDM comparados aos controles. Uma ativação da arginase II em plaquetas sem qualquer alteração na sua expressão foi demonstrada em pacientes com TDM. Além disso, um aumento na carbonilação de proteínas e na expressão de GPx, de NADPH e de PDE5 foi observado em plaquetas de pacientes com TDM. A produção de TBARS, a atividade de GPx e CAT nas plaquetas e no soro não foram afetados pelo TDM. Não houve diferença nos níveis de fibrinogênio entre pacientes com TDM e controles. A ativação da arginase, somada ao estresse oxidativo, reduziria a biodisponibilidade de NO levando à disfunção plaquetária nos pacientes com TDM. O presente estudo acrescenta dados importantes para a compreensão dos mecanismos celulares envolvidos na relação TDM e DCV. Além disso, abre caminho para a utilização de novas ferramentas farmacológicas, como os antioxidantes, para o tratamento do TDM.
Resumo:
A obesidade é um distúrbio metabólico de etiologia multifatorial e elevada prevalência no Brasil, que pode ser definida por um índice de massa corporal (peso em quilogramas dividido pela altura em metros ao quadrado) maior ou igual a 30 kg/m2, e que está associada de forma independente a um elevado risco de morbidade e mortalidade cardiovascular devido aos eventos aterotrombóticos. O óxido nítrico (NO), uma pequena molécula gasosa, é produzido através da conversão do aminoácido catiônico L-arginina em L-citrulina e NO em uma reação catalisada por uma família de enzimas denominadas NO-sintases (NOS), e funciona como um protetor cardiovascular modulando por exemplo o relaxamento do músculo liso vascular e a função plaquetária. O objetivo desta tese foi avaliar a via L-arginina-NO, bem como investigar a função plaquetária, o estresse oxidativo, e a atividade da arginase em pacientes com obesidade. O transporte de L-arginina, a produção de guanosina monofosfato cíclica (GMPc), a atividade e a expressão das isoformas da NOS (iNOS e eNOS), a atividade da arginase, o estresse oxidativo (produção de espécies reativas de oxigênio EROs; atividade da superóxido dismutase SOD; e atividade da catalase), bem como a função plaquetária foram medidos nas plaquetas dos pacientes com obesidade. Nas hemácias, foram medidos o transporte de L-arginina e a atividade da NOS e da arginase. Os níveis de aminoácidos e de marcadores inflamatórios (fibrinogênio e proteína C reativa) também foram medidos sistemicamente. Os resultados demonstram que o influxo de L-arginina via sistema y+L, a atividade da NOS e a produção de GMPc estão diminuídos nas plaquetas dos pacientes obesos em relação aos controles saudáveis, enquanto que não houve diferença na atividade da arginase. Além disso, a expressão das isoformas da NOS bem como a agregação plaquetária em plaquetas de pacientes com obesidade mostrou-se aumentada em relação aos controles. Nas hemácias destes pacientes, observou-se elevado influxo de L-arginina via sistema y+ e y+L e atividade da NOS, e nenhuma diferença na função da arginase. A concentração plasmática de L-arginina não foi afetada pela obesidade, mas já os marcadores inflamatórios estavam significativamente aumentados. A produção de EROs e a atividade da catalase nas plaquetas não estava alterada em pacientes com obesidade, enquanto que a atividade da SOD mostrou-se diminuida. Assim, apesar do aumento da produção de NO pelas hemácias, é possível que a baixa produção plaquetária de NO, além do estado inflamatório e um possível estresse oxidativo, estejam contribuindo para a elevada atividade plaquetária observada na obesidade. As descobertas aqui apresentadas contribuem para uma melhor compreensão dos eventos cardiovasculares presentes na obesidade.
Resumo:
Os transtornos psiquiátricos são um problema de saúde pública, ocupando cinco das dez principais causas de incapacitação no mundo. O transtorno bipolar (TB) é um transtorno de humor, segundo o DSM-IV (manual diagnóstico e estatístico de doenças mentais), o qual afeta cerca de 1% da população mundial. O TB do tipo I (TBI) é o mais frequente entre os TBs e é caracterizado pela presença de episódios maníacos ou mistos acompanhados por episódios depressivos. Assim como outros transtornos psiquiátricos, como a depressão, ansiedade e esquizofrenia, o TB representa um importante fator de risco cardiovascular, e pacientes com este transtorno apresentam mortalidade cardiovascular duas vezes maior que a população em geral. No entanto, os exatos mecanismos envolvidos nesta relação permanecem desconhecidos. Estudos sugerem o envolvimento da via L-arginina-óxido nitrico (NO) na patofisiologia do TB. O NO é responsável por diversas funções fisiológicas, incluindo a inibição da função plaquetária. A L-arginina, sua precursora, é transportada em plaquetas pelo carreador y+L, ativando a enzima NO sintase (NOS), a qual produz NO e e L-citrulina. Uma vez produzido, o NO ativa a enzima guanilato ciclase (GC), levando ao aumento dos níveis de guanosina monofosfato cíclica (GMPc). Adicionalmente, a L-arginina não é exclusivamente utilizada pela NOS, ela também pode ser metabolizada pela arginase e produzir L-ornitina e uréia. A biodisponibilidade do NO depende tanto de sua síntese como de sua degradação pelo estresse oxidativo ou pela inflamação. O objetivo deste estudo foi investigar detalhadamente a via L-arginina-NO-GMPc em plaquetas de pacientes com TBI, a expressão da arginase e outros marcadores de estresse oxidativo e inflamação. Vinte e oito pacientes com TB e dez indivíduos saudáveis foram incluídos no estudo. Nossos estudos mostraram uma redução da atividade da NOS em todos os grupos de pacientes bipolares (fases de eutimia, depressão e mania), quando comparados aos controles. Isto ocorreu na presença de concentrações normais do substrato e de seu transporte, e da expressão inalterada das isoformas eNOS e iNOS. A expressão da arginase II não diferiu entre os grupos estudados, indicando que a disponibilidade da L-arginina não está sendo desviada para o ciclo de uréia em plaquetas. A produção reduzida de GMPc foi observada mesmo com a expressão inalterada da GC. A atividade e marcadores de estresse oxidativo, avaliada através da quantificação da oxidação de proteínas e atividade da catalase, não foram modificadas em plaquetas de pacientes com TB, enquanto que a atividade da SOD estava aumentada em todas as fases. Os níveis séricos da proteína C-reativa (PCR), um marcador inflamatório, estão aumentados em pacientes maníacos, comparados aos controles. A reduzida produção de NO observada em plaquetas de pacientes bipolares pode ser um elo entre esta complexa associação entre TB e a doença cardiovascular.
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BACKGROUND: Molecular tools may provide insight into cardiovascular risk. We assessed whether metabolites discriminate coronary artery disease (CAD) and predict risk of cardiovascular events. METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed mass-spectrometry-based profiling of 69 metabolites in subjects from the CATHGEN biorepository. To evaluate discriminative capabilities of metabolites for CAD, 2 groups were profiled: 174 CAD cases and 174 sex/race-matched controls ("initial"), and 140 CAD cases and 140 controls ("replication"). To evaluate the capability of metabolites to predict cardiovascular events, cases were combined ("event" group); of these, 74 experienced death/myocardial infarction during follow-up. A third independent group was profiled ("event-replication" group; n=63 cases with cardiovascular events, 66 controls). Analysis included principal-components analysis, linear regression, and Cox proportional hazards. Two principal components analysis-derived factors were associated with CAD: 1 comprising branched-chain amino acid metabolites (factor 4, initial P=0.002, replication P=0.01), and 1 comprising urea cycle metabolites (factor 9, initial P=0.0004, replication P=0.01). In multivariable regression, these factors were independently associated with CAD in initial (factor 4, odds ratio [OR], 1.36; 95% CI, 1.06 to 1.74; P=0.02; factor 9, OR, 0.67; 95% CI, 0.52 to 0.87; P=0.003) and replication (factor 4, OR, 1.43; 95% CI, 1.07 to 1.91; P=0.02; factor 9, OR, 0.66; 95% CI, 0.48 to 0.91; P=0.01) groups. A factor composed of dicarboxylacylcarnitines predicted death/myocardial infarction (event group hazard ratio 2.17; 95% CI, 1.23 to 3.84; P=0.007) and was associated with cardiovascular events in the event-replication group (OR, 1.52; 95% CI, 1.08 to 2.14; P=0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Metabolite profiles are associated with CAD and subsequent cardiovascular events.
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Chapter 1 introduces the scope of the work by identifying the clinically relevant prenatal disorders and presently available diagnostic methods. The methodology followed in this work is presented, along with a brief account of the principles of the analytical and statistical tools employed. A thorough description of the state of the art of metabolomics in prenatal research concludes the chapter, highlighting the merit of this novel strategy to identify robust disease biomarkers. The scarce use of maternal and newborn urine in previous reports enlightens the relevance of this work. Chapter 2 presents a description of all the experimental details involved in the work performed, comprising sampling, sample collection and preparation issues, data acquisition protocols and data analysis procedures. The proton Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) characterization of maternal urine composition in healthy pregnancies is presented in Chapter 3. The urinary metabolic profile characteristic of each pregnancy trimester was defined and a 21-metabolite signature found descriptive of the metabolic adaptations occurring throughout pregnancy. 8 metabolites were found, for the first time to our knowledge, to vary in connection to pregnancy, while known metabolic effects were confirmed. This chapter includes a study of the effects of non-fasting (used in this work) as a possible confounder. Chapter 4 describes the metabolomic study of 2nd trimester maternal urine for the diagnosis of fetal disorders and prediction of later-developing complications. This was achieved by applying a novel variable selection method developed in the context of this work. It was found that fetal malformations (FM) (and, specifically those of the central nervous system, CNS) and chromosomal disorders (CD) (and, specifically, trisomy 21, T21) are accompanied by changes in energy, amino acids, lipids and nucleotides metabolic pathways, with CD causing a further deregulation in sugars metabolism, urea cycle and/or creatinine biosynthesis. Multivariate analysis models´ validation revealed classification rates (CR) of 84% for FM (87%, CNS) and 85% for CD (94%, T21). For later-diagnosed preterm delivery (PTD), preeclampsia (PE) and intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), it is found that urinary NMR profiles have early predictive value, with CRs ranging from 84% for PTD (11-20 gestational weeks, g.w., prior to diagnosis), 94% for PE (18-24 g.w. pre-diagnosis) and 94% for IUGR (2-22 g.w. pre-diagnosis). This chapter includes results obtained for an ultraperformance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS) study of pre-PTD samples and correlation with NMR data. One possible marker was detected, although its identification was not possible. Chapter 5 relates to the NMR metabolomic study of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), establishing a potentially predictive urinary metabolic profile for GDM, 2-21 g.w. prior to diagnosis (CR 83%). Furthermore, the NMR spectrum was shown to carry information on individual phenotypes, able to predict future insulin treatment requirement (CR 94%). Chapter 6 describes results that demonstrate the impact of delivery mode (CR 88%) and gender (CR 76%) on newborn urinary profile. It was also found that newborn prematurity, respiratory depression, large for gestational age growth and malformations induce relevant metabolic perturbations (CR 82-92%), as well as maternal conditions, namely GDM (CR 82%) and maternal psychiatric disorders (CR 91%). Finally, the main conclusions of this thesis are presented in Chapter 7, highlighting the value of maternal or newborn urine metabolomics for pregnancy monitoring and disease prediction, towards the development of new early and non-invasive diagnostic methods.
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Chronic liver failure leads to hyperammonemia and consequently increased brain ammonia concentrations, resulting in hepatic encephalopathy. When the liver fails to regulate ammonia concentrations, the brain, devoid of a urea cycle, relies solely on the amidation of glutamate to glutamine through glutamine synthetase, to efficiently clear ammonia. Surprisingly, under hyperammonemic conditions, the brain is not capable of increasing its capacity to remove ammonia, which even decreases in some regions of the brain. This non-induction of glutamine synthetase in astrocytes could result from possible limiting substrates or cofactors for the enzyme, or an indirect effect of ammonia on glutamine synthetase expression. In addition, there is evidence that nitration of the enzyme resulting from exposure to nitric oxide could also be implicated. The present review summarizes these possible factors involved in limiting the increase in capacity of glutamine synthetase in brain, in chronic liver failure.
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Hyperammonemia is a key factor in the pathogenesis of hepatic encephalopathy (HE) as well as other metabolic encephalopathies, such as those associated with inherited disorders of urea cycle enzymes and in Reye's syndrome. Acute HE results in increased brain ammonia (up to 5 mM), astrocytic swelling, and altered glutamatergic function. In the present study, using fluorescence imaging techniques, acute exposure (10 min) of ammonia (NH4+/NH3) to cultured astrocytes resulted in a concentration-dependent, transient increase in [Ca2+]i. This calcium transient was due to release from intracellular calcium stores, since the response was thapsigargin-sensitive and was still observed in calcium-free buffer. Using an enzyme-linked fluorescence assay, glutamate release was measured indirectly via the production of NADH (a naturally fluorescent product when excited with UV light). NH4+/NH3 (5 mM) stimulated a calcium-dependent glutamate release from cultured astrocytes, which was inhibited after preincubation with 1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid acetoxymethyl ester but unaffected after preincubation with glutamate transport inhibitors dihydrokainate and DL-threo-beta-benzyloxyaspartate. NH4+/NH3 (5 mM) also induced a transient intracellular alkaline shift. To investigate whether the effects of NH4+/NH3 were mediated by an increase in pH(i), we applied trimethylamine (TMA+/TMA) as another weak base. TMA+/TMA (5 mM) induced a similar transient increase in both pH(i) and [Ca2+]i (mobilization from intracellular calcium stores) and resulted in calcium-dependent release of glutamate. These results indicate that an acute exposure to ammonia, resulting in cytosolic alkalinization, leads to calcium-dependent glutamate release from astrocytes. A deregulation of glutamate release from astrocytes by ammonia could contribute to glutamate dysfunction consistently observed in acute HE.
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Elevated concentrations of ammonia in the brain as a result of hyperammonemia leads to cerebral dysfunction involving a spectrum of neuropsychiatric and neurological symptoms (impaired memory, shortened attention span, sleep-wake inversions, brain edema, intracranial hypertension, seizures, ataxia and coma). Many studies have demonstrated ammonia as a major player involved in the neuropathophysiology associated with liver failure and inherited urea cycle enzyme disorders. Ammonia in solution is composed of a gas (NH(3)) and an ionic (NH(4) (+)) component which are both capable of crossing plasma membranes through diffusion, channels and transport mechanisms and as a result have a direct effect on pH. Furthermore, NH(4) (+) has similar properties as K(+) and, therefore, competes with K(+) on K(+) transporters and channels resulting in a direct effect on membrane potential. Ammonia is also a product as well as a substrate for many different biochemical reactions and consequently, an increase in brain ammonia accompanies disturbances in cerebral metabolism. These direct effects of elevated ammonia concentrations on the brain will lead to a cascade of secondary effects and encephalopathy.