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NAXE deficiency: A neurometabolic disorder of NAD(P)HX repair amenable for metabolic correction

Authors :
Joshua Manor
Daniel Calame
Charul Gijavanekar
Kristen Fisher
Jill Hunter
Elizabeth Mizerik
Carlos Bacino
Fernando Scaglia
Sarah H. Elsea
Source :
Mol Genet Metab
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The NAD(P)HX repair system is a metabolite damage repair mechanism responsible for restoration of NADH and NADPH after their inactivation by hydration. Deficiency in either of its two enzymes, NAD(P)HX dehydratase (NAXD) or NAD(P)HX epimerase (NAXE), causes a fatal neurometabolic disorder characterized by decompensations precipitated by inflammatory stress. Clinical findings include rapidly progressive muscle weakness, ataxia, ophthalmoplegia, and motor and cognitive regression, while neuroimaging abnormalities are subtle or nonspecific, making a clinical diagnosis challenging. During stress, nonenzymatic conversion of NAD(P)H to NAD(P)HX increases, and in the absence of repair, NAD(P)H is depleted, and NAD(P)HX accumulates, leading to decompensation; however, the contribution of each to the metabolic derangement is not established. Herein, we summarize the clinical knowledge of NAXE deficiency from 30 cases and lessons learned about disease pathogenesis from cell cultures and model organisms and describe a metabolomics signature obtained by untargeted metabolomics analysis in one case at the time of crisis and after initiation of treatment. Overall, biochemical findings support a model of acute depletion of NAD(+), signs of mitochondrial dysfunction, and altered lipidomics. These findings are further substantiated by untargeted metabolomics six months post-crisis showing that niacin supplementation reverses primary metabolomic abnormalities concurrent with improved clinical status.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mol Genet Metab
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....da1a9438dde05cad193e1051f65bb4db