Publication | Open Access
Congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency arising from cleavage and secretion of a mutant form of the enzyme
52
Citations
33
References
2000
Year
Developmental AnomalyNovel Csid PhenotypeProtein SecretionDevelopmental BiologySignal TransductionBiochemistryMutant FormMedicineGeneticsInherited Metabolic DiseaseCongenital Sucrase-isomaltase DeficiencyNatural SciencesPoint MutationCellular EnzymologyIntracellular TraffickingProteomicsCell BiologySecretory Pathway
Congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency (CSID) is an autosomal recessive human intestinal disorder that is clinically characterized by fermentative diarrhea, abdominal pain, and cramps upon ingestion of sugar. The symptoms are the consequence of absent or drastically reduced enzymatic activities of sucrase and isomaltase, the components of the intestinal integral membrane glycoprotein sucrase-isomaltase (SI). Several known phenotypes of CSID result from an altered posttranslational processing of SI. We describe here a novel CSID phenotype, in which pro-SI undergoes an unusual intracellular cleavage that eliminates its transmembrane domain. Biosynthesis of pro-SI in intestinal explants and in cells transfected with the SI cDNA of this phenotype demonstrated a cleavage occurring within the endoplasmic reticulum due to a point mutation that converts a leucine to proline at residue 340 of isomaltase. Cleaved pro-SI is transported to and processed in the Golgi apparatus and is ultimately secreted into the exterior milieu as an active enzyme. To our knowledge this is the first report of a disorder whose pathogenesis results not from protein malfolding or mistargeting, but from the conversion of an integral membrane glycoprotein into a secreted species that is lost from the cell surface.
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