Biochemical signatures of disease severity in Multiple Sulfatase Deficiency

2023 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Biochemical signatures of disease severity in Multiple Sulfatase Deficiency​
Adang, L. A.; Mowafy, S.; Herbst, Z. M.; Zhou, Z.; Schlotawa, L.; Radhakrishnan, K. & Bentley, B. et al.​ (2023) 
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease, art. jimd.12688​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/jimd.12688 

Documents & Media

License

Usage license

Details

Authors
Adang, Laura A.; Mowafy, Samar; Herbst, Zackary M.; Zhou, Zitao; Schlotawa, Lars; Radhakrishnan, Karthikeyan; Bentley, Brenna; Pham, Vi; Yu, Emily; Pillai, Nishitha R.; Ahrens‐Nicklas, Rebecca C.
Abstract
Abstract Sulfatases catalyze essential cellular reactions, including degradation of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). All sulfatases are post‐translationally activated by the formylglycine generating enzyme (FGE) which is deficient in Multiple Sulfatase Deficiency (MSD), a neurodegenerative lysosomal storage disease. Historically, patients were presumed to be deficient of all sulfatase activities; however, a more nuanced relationship is emerging. Each sulfatase may differ in their degree of post‐translational modification by FGE, which may influence the phenotypic spectrum of MSD. Here, we evaluate if residual sulfatase activity and accumulating GAG patterns distinguish cases from controls and stratify clinical severity groups in MSD. We quantify sulfatase activities and GAG accumulation using three complementary methods in MSD participants. Sulfatases differed greatly in their tolerance of reduction in FGE‐mediated activation. Enzymes that degrade heparan sulfate (HS) demonstrated lower residual activities than those that act on other GAGs. Similarly, HS‐derived urinary GAG subspecies preferentially accumulated, distinguished cases from controls, and correlated with disease severity. Accumulation patterns of specific sulfatase substrates in MSD provide fundamental insights into sulfatase regulation and will serve as much‐needed biomakers for upcoming clinical trials. This work highlights that biomarker investigation of an ultra‐rare disease can simultaneously inform our understanding of fundamental biology and advance clinical trial readiness efforts. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Issue Date
2023
Journal
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease 
ISSN
0141-8955
eISSN
1573-2665
Language
English

Reference

Citations


Social Media