AI Article Synopsis

  • Pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy (PDE) is caused by genetic variants in the ALDH7A1 gene, which plays a key role in lysine metabolism, particularly affecting GABA and energy production in the brain.
  • A study measured GABA pathway metabolites and tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle activities in both human patients with PDE-ALDH7A1 and genetic knock-out zebrafish models, revealing significant variations in enzyme activities and metabolite levels.
  • Results indicated impaired energy production and increased glutamate in the brain of patients, suggesting that these metabolic disturbances contribute to the severity of PDE-ALDH7A1 and highlight potential pathways to further investigate for therapeutic interventions.

Article Abstract

Background: Pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy (PDE) is due to biallelic variants in ALDH7A1 (PDE-ALDH7A1). ALDH7A1 encodes α-aminoadipic semialdehyde dehydrogenase in lysine catabolism. We investigated the gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA) metabolism and energy production pathways in human PDE-ALDH7A1 and its knock-out aldh7a1 zebrafish model.

Methods: We measured GABA pathway, and tricarboxylic acid cycle metabolites and electron transport chain activities in patients with PDE-ALDH7A1 and in knock-out aldh7a1 zebrafish.

Results: We report results of three patients with PDE-ALDH7A1: low paired complex I+II and complex II+III and individual complex IV activities in muscle biopsy in patient 1 (likely more severe phenotype); significantly elevated CSF glutamate in the GABA pathway and elevated CSF citrate, succinate, isocitrate and α-ketoglutarate in the TCA cycle in patient 3 (likely more severe phenotype); and normal CSF GABA pathway and TCA cycle metabolites on long-term pyridoxine therapy in patient 2 (likely milder phenotype). All GABA pathway metabolites (γ-hydroxybutyrate, glutamine, glutamate, total GABA, succinic semialdehyde) and TCA cycle metabolites (citrate, malate, fumarate, isocitrate, lactate) were significantly low in the homozygous knock-out aldh7a1 zebrafish compared to the wildtype zebrafish. Homozygous knock-out aldh7a1 zebrafish had decreased electron transport chain enzyme activities compared to wildtype zebrafish.

Discussion: We report impaired electron transport chain function, accumulation of glutamate in the central nervous system and TCA cycle dysfunction in human PDE-ALDH7A1 and abnormal GABA pathway, TCA cycle and electron transport chain in knock-out aldh7a1 zebrafish. Central nervous system glutamate toxicity and impaired energy production may play important roles in the disease neuropathogenesis and severity in human PDE-ALDH7A1.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8425566PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0257073PLOS

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