D-bifunctional protein deficiency
D-Bifunctional protein deficiency is an autosomal recessive peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation disorder. Peroxisomal disorders are usually caused by a combination of peroxisomal assembly defects or by deficiencies of specific peroxisomal enzymes. The peroxisome is an organelle in the cell similar to the lysosome that functions to detoxify the cell. Peroxisomes contain many different enzymes, such as catalase, and their main function is to neutralize free radicals and detoxify drugs. For this reason peroxisomes are ubiquitous in the liver and kidney. D-BP deficiency is the most severe peroxisomal disorder, often resembling Zellweger syndrome.
Characteristics of the disorder include neonatal hypotonia and seizures, occurring mostly within the first month of life, as well as visual and hearing impairment. Other symptoms include severe craniofacial disfiguration, psychomotor delay, and neuronal migration defects. Most onsets of the disorder begin in the gestational weeks of development and most affected individuals die within the first two years of life.
Classification
DBP deficiency can be divided into three types:- type I, characterized by a deficiency in both the hydratase and dehydrogenase units of D-BP
- type II, in which only the hydratase unit is non-functional
- type III, with only a deficiency in the dehydrogenase unit
D-BP Protein
The D-bifunctional protein is composed of three enzymatic domains: the N-terminal short chain alcohol dehydrogenase reductase, central hydratase domain, and the C-terminal sterol carrier protein 2.The DBP protein also known as "multifunctional protein 2", "multifunctional enzyme 2", or "D-peroxisomal bifunctional"enzyme", catalyzes the second and third steps of peroxisomal β-oxidation of fatty acids and their derivatives.
A non-functional D-BP protein results in the abnormal accumulation of long chain fatty acids and bile acid intermediates. The D-BP protein contains a peroxisomal targeting signal 1 unit at the C-terminus allowing for its transport into peroxisomes by the PTS1 receptor. Inside the peroxisomes, the D-BP protein is partially cleaved exclusively between the SDR and hydratase"domains.
DBP is a stereospecific enzyme; hydratase domain forms only -hydroxy-acyl-CoA intermediates from trans-2-enoyl-CoAs. D-BP is expressed throughout the entire human body, with the highest mRNA levels in the liver and brain. The hydrogenase and hydratase units of DBP exist as dimers, necessary for correct folding and therefore function of the enzyme.
Genetic
The D-BP gene, found on the long arm of chromosome 5, consists of 24 exons and 23 introns and is over 100kb in size. Exons 1-12 code for the SDR domain, 12-21 for the hydratase domain, and 21-24 for the SCP2 domain. Transcription is regulated at 400 basepairs upstream of the transcription start site.The missense mutation G16S is the most common mutation that leads to D-BP deficiency. In a 2006 study in which 110 patients were tested, 28 had this frameshift mutation. The second most frequent mutation was the missense mutation N457Y which was seen in 13 of the 110 patients. Type I patients showed only deletions, insertions, and nonsense mutations were identified, most leading to shortened polypeptides. Most type II patients show missense mutations in D-BP hydratase unit as well as some in-frame deletions. Type III"individuals commonly show missense mutations in the coding region of the dehydrogenase domain.