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Case Report

Clinical, Biochemical, and Molecular Characterization of Two Families with Novel Mutations in the LDHA Gene (GSD XI)

by
Pablo Serrano-Lorenzo
1,2,
María Rabasa
3,
Jesús Esteban
4,
Irene Hidalgo Mayoral
1,
Cristina Domínguez-González
1,2,
Agustín Blanco-Echevarría
5,
Rocío Garrido-Moraga
1,
Alejandro Lucia
1,6,
Alberto Blázquez
1,
Juan C. Rubio
1,
Carmen Palma-Milla
7,
Joaquín Arenas
1,2 and
Miguel A. Martín
1,2,*
1
Mitochondrial and Neuromuscular Disorders Group, Hospital 12 de Octubre Health Research Institute (imas12), 28041 Madrid, Spain
2
Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Raras (CIBERER), 28029 Madrid, Spain
3
Neurology Department, Hospital de Fuenlabrada, 28942 Madrid, Spain
4
Neuromuscular Unit, Department of Neurology, 12 de Octubre University Hospital, 28041 Madrid, Spain
5
Department of Internal Medicine, 12 de Octubre University Hospital, 28041 Madrid, Spain
6
Faculty of Sport Sciences, Universidad Europea de Madrid, 28670 Madrid, Spain
7
Department of Genetics, 12 de Octubre University Hospital, 28041 Madrid, Spain
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Genes 2022, 13(10), 1835; https://doi.org/10.3390/genes13101835
Submission received: 16 September 2022 / Revised: 30 September 2022 / Accepted: 7 October 2022 / Published: 11 October 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Genetics and Epigenetics of Neuromuscular Diseases)

Abstract

:
Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) catalyzes the reversible conversion of L-lactate to pyruvate. LDH-A deficiency is an autosomal recessive disorder (glycogenosis type XI, OMIM#612933) caused by mutations in the LDHA gene. We present two young adult female patients presenting with intolerance to anaerobic exercise, episodes of rhabdomyolysis, and, in one of the patients, psoriasis-like dermatitis. We identified in the LDHA gene a homozygous c.410C>A substitution that predicts a p.Ser137Ter nonsense mutation in Patient One and a compound heterozygous c.410C>A (p.Ser137Ter) and c.750G>A (p.Trp250Ter) nonsense mutation in Patient Two. The pathogenicity of the variants was demonstrated by electrophoretic separation of LDH isoenzymes. Moreover, a flat lactate curve on the forearm exercise test, along with the clinical combination of myopathy and psoriatic-like dermatitis, can also lead to the diagnosis.

1. Introduction

1.1. LDH Enzyme

Lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27; L-lactate: NAD+ oxidoreductase; LDH) catalyzes the reversible conversion of L-lactate to pyruvate, with NAD+ as a hydrogen acceptor [1]. LDH plays a key role in anaerobic glycolysis as it regenerates nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) from NADH to provide ATP in situations where mitochondrial NADH oxidation cannot match the glycolysis rate, which can thus result in NAD+ depletion with a subsequent drop in glycolytic flux [2]. On the other hand, during anaerobic exercise, adenosine monophosphate (AMP) deaminase (AMPD, an enzyme encoded by the AMPD1 gene) is activated in skeletal muscle. AMPD is an important regulator of muscle energy metabolism that is involved in the synthesis of inosine monophosphate (IMP), with the liberation of ammonia and displacement of the myokinase reaction toward ATP production [3].
LDH is composed of four peptide chains of two types, M (muscle, encoded by the LDHA gene) and H (heart, encoded by the LDHB gene), with their different combinations forming five tetrameric isoenzymes: LDH-1 (H4), LDH-2 (H3M), LDH-3 (H2M2), LDH-4 (HM3), and LDH-5 (M4)—listed in order of decreasing anodal mobility [1,4]. LDH is widely found in the body, yet has tissue-specific expression. Thus, isoenzymes LDH-1 and LDH-2 predominate in the heart, kidneys, and erythrocytes, whereas LDH-4 and LDH-5 are mainly found in the liver and skeletal muscle [5]. In turn, LDH concentrations in most tissues are greater than those physiologically found in serum, and therefore, the leakage of the enzyme from damaged cells (e.g., in the event of haemolytic anemia or rhabdomyolysis) leads to remarkable increases in LDH activity in serum [1].

1.2. Lactate Dehydrogenase-A Deficiency

LDH-A deficiency (LDHA deficiency, glycogenosis storage disease [GSD] type XI; OMIM#612933) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by pathogenic mutations in the LDHA, a gene that contains seven exons and spans approximately 12 kb in 11p15.1.
The clinical presentation of LDHA deficiency is characterized by exercise intolerance, with cramps, myalgia, and myoglobinuria due to rhabdomyolysis after strenuous exercise [6]. Myoglobinuria may lead to acute renal failure [7,8]. Furthermore, uterine pain and stiffness have been reported in pregnant patients [7], associated with an increase in serum pyruvate levels [9], and all labors were reported to require caesarean section.
Several skin lesions have been documented to be associated with the disease, such as desquamating erythematosquamous lesions, pustular psoriasis-like lesions, and annular erythematous plaques [10,11,12]. These conditions typically appear in spring and spontaneously resolve after the fall [11,12,13]. In some cases, LDHA-deficient patients only exhibit skin symptoms [13].
Since the first family with LDHA deficiency was described in 1980 [14], 14 different families with altered LDHA activity have been reported. Nearly all of them have been genetically characterized, except for a case in whom diagnosis was exclusively based on enzyme activity. Most of the reported mutations are deletions, with a 20 bp frameshift deletion being the most prevalent variant. One splicing mutation, three nonsense mutations, and one small insertion have also been described [6,7,8,10,12]. Although nearly all mutations have been characterized, the correlation between genotype and phenotype is still unclear. Affected cases with the same genotype show variable clinical manifestations and severity.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Case Report

2.1.1. Family 1

A 17-year-old female showed myoglobinuria, myalgia, and pain throughout the body following an exercise stress test at school. She reported no weakness, but showed intolerance to exercise, especially to intense tasks of short-duration (i.e., ‘anaerobic’ exercise), as well as several episodes of rhabdomyolysis triggered by exertion. Basal serum creatine kinase (CK) values were increased (2-5X reference values, <170U/L). She had previously been diagnosed with psoriatic dermatitis (Figure 1). Laboratory tests displayed an abnormal response of the non-ischemic forearm exercise test: flat lactate curve (normal: lactate increase 4-6X) and exaggerated ammonium response with an increase of ≈30X (Figure 2) (normal: ammonium increase 5-10X). Both parents and the patient’s only sister were asymptomatic. Frequent mutations in the Caucasian population that are known to be associated with exercise intolerance (i.e., PYGM gene p.Arg50Ter, p.Gly205Ser, and p.Trp798Gln variants in the muscle isoform of glycogen phosphorylase, resulting in McArdle disease [GSDV] and the CPT2 gene p.Ser113Leu variant in carnitine palmitoyltransferase) were absent.

2.1.2. Family 2

An 18-year-old female was studied for hyper-CK-emia. In the past, she suffered from myalgia after exercising and medium-high intensity efforts resulted in the appearance of symptoms and dark urine in the following days. She experienced muscle weakness, exercise intolerance (after intense running), and subsequent episodes of rhabdomyolysis. Serum CK basal values were 2-5X greater than reference values (normal: <170 U/L). Laboratory tests displayed an abnormal response to the non-ischemic forearm exercise test: flat lactate curve (normal: lactate increase 4-6X) and exaggerated ammonium response, with an increase of ≈30X (Figure 2) (normal: ammonium increase 5-10X). Both parents were asymptomatic. She has no siblings. She showed no p.Arg50Ter, p.Gly205Ser, or p.Trp798Arg mutations in the PYGM gene nor the p.Ser113Leu mutation in the CPT2 gene.

2.2. Molecular Genetic Studies

2.2.1. Metabolic Myopathies Panel

Blood DNA was extracted using QIAamp DNA Blood Midi Kit (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany). A customized next-generation sequencing (NGS) panel of 32 genes associated with inherited metabolic myopathies was designed using Ampliseq™, and sequencing was conducted using the PGM-Ion Torrent platform (Life Technologies, Carlsbad, CA, USA). Sequence alignment (ref. GRCh37/hg19) and variant detection were performed in Torrent Suite (TMAP-variantCaller plugin). The annotation and prioritization of variants were carried out by our own script integration with Annovar [15]. The theoretical coverage of this panel reaches 99.2%.

2.2.2. Clinical and Methodological Validation

Variant prioritization was performed assuming an autosomal recessive or recessive X-linked inheritance using the following steps: (i) Identified variants with minor allele frequency < 0.05 in population database, including the 1000 Genomes Project (http://browser.1000genomes.org, accessed on 24 June 2022), Exome Variant Server (http://evs.gs.washington.edu/EVS, accessed on 24 June 2022), Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD) (https://gnomad.broadinstitute.org, accessed on 24 June 2022), Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Database (dbSNP) (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/snp, accessed on 24 June 2022), and Collaborative Spanish Variant Server (http://csvs.babelomics.org, accessed on 24 June 2022); (ii) Intronic variants localized far from 15 nucleotides of the exon/intron junction were discarded; (iii) Status and ranking of the variants were performed in the ClinVar database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/clinvar, accessed on 24 June 2022); (iv) Determined variant pathogenicity predictors; (v) Performed assessment of phylogenetic conservation.

2.2.3. PCR Amplification and Sanger Sequencing

Family segregation studies and haplotype analyses were performed by Sanger sequencing. The LDHA gene, HPS5 biogenesis of lysosomal organelles complex 2 subunit 2 (HPS5), tumor susceptibility 101 (TSG101), and neuron navigator 2 (NAV2) genes (genes surrounding LDHA sequenced for haplotype analysis) were amplified from genomic DNA by conventional PCR. The sequences of the primers used to amplify the LDHA variants were:
5′-GTGTGAACGTTGAGCTTGGG-3′ and 5′-TGCAGTCAAAAGCCTCACCT-3′ for LDHA exon 4.
PCR products were purified using Illustra GFX PCR DNA and gel band purification kit (GE Healthcare, Chicago, IL, USA), followed by Sanger sequencing in a 3130xl Genetic Analyzer (Applied Biosystems, Warrington, UK) using a Big Dye Terminator Cycle Sequencing Kit (Applied Biosystems).

2.3. LDH Isoenzyme Determination

Plasma LDH isoenzymes (collected in a lithium heparin tube) were separated by electrophoresis in agarose gel using the SAS-1 LD Vis Kit in the SAS-1 Plus instrument (Helena Biosciences Europe, UK). This instrument uses a modification in the method, as described by Preston et al. [16]: activity bands are visualized with a colorimetric reagent using lactate as a substrate and NAD+ as an acceptor of electrons and staining using a tetrazolium salt. Electrophoresis was performed at 80 V and 15 °C for 20 min following incubation at 45 °C for 25 min with the reagents required for the identification of LDH isoenzymes.

2.4. Non-Ischemic Forearm Exercise Test

Lactate and ammonium levels were quantified in serum at basal conditions and after 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 min, respectively, of the forearm exercise test [17].

3. Results

To identify the genetic causes of patient phenotypes, we performed a customized NGS panel including 32 genes associated with metabolic myopathies. In the index case of Family 1, we found 178 variants. Only one variant was prioritized after applying the established criteria and ruling out low-quality variants and sequencing artifacts: a homozygous c.410C>A substitution that predicts a p.Ser137Ter nonsense mutation in the LDHA gene (NM_005566). This variant was present in the gnomAD database with an allele frequency < 0.001% and was absent in the 1000 Genomes Project database. As the variant generates a premature stop codon (amino acid position 137 of 333), it is considered potentially pathogenic. Following the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) guidelines for the interpretation of sequence variants [18], the variant was classified as pathogenic. This variant is not present in public databases of variants, such as ClinVar or dbSNP.
The presence of the homozygous variant c.410C>A (p.Ser137Ter) in the LDHA gene of the patient was confirmed by Sanger sequencing. The patient´s asymptomatic mother, father, and sister were analyzed for the variant, and were all found to be heterozygous.
In the index case of Family 2, we found 200 variants. After applying the established criteria and ruling out low-quality variants and sequencing artifacts, two variants in the LDHA gene (NM_005566) were prioritized: a heterozygous c.410C>A substitution (the same one found in homozygosity in the index case of Family 1) and a heterozygous c.750G>A (p.Trp250Ter) nonsense mutation. This variant was absent in gnomAD and the 1000 Genomes Project databases and was not present in public databases of variants, such as ClinVar or dbSNP. As the variant generates a premature stop codon (amino acid position 250 of 333), it is considered potentially pathogenic. Following the ACMG guidelines for the interpretation of sequence variants [18], this variant was classified as pathogenic.
The presence of the heterozygous mutations c.410C>A (p.Ser137Ter) and c.750G>A (p.Trp250Ter) in the LDHA gene in the patient was confirmed by Sanger sequencing. The patient’s mother was found to be heterozygous for the c.410C>A (p.Ser137Ter), with the c.750G>A (p.Trp250Ter) found in heterozygosity in the patient´s father, verifying that both variants were present in a biallelic form in the patient. Sequencing of three SNPs in the HPS5 (rs76929453, NM_181507: c.1862+87C>T), TSG101 (rs2658552, NM_006292: c.549-84G>A), and NAV2 (rs12283929, NM_001244963: c.3972-49C>G) genes that surround the LDHA gene—the distance between these SNPs and the variant c.410C>A (p.Ser137Ter) was less than 100K nucleotides—showed the same haplotype for the mutant allele in both families (Figure 3).
In the index cases of both families, plasma LDH levels were within (or slightly above) the normal range, due to muscle damage (Table 1). Basal CK levels were also increased (2-5x the reference values in both cases). We performed electrophoretic separation and subsequent visualization of each LDH isoenzyme in the plasma of both patients. Compared with the normal five-band isoenzyme pattern in controls, the isoenzyme pattern of the patients revealed a complete absence of the isoenzymes containing the M subunit, showing only one band of the LDH-1 (H4) isoenzyme (Figure 4).

4. Discussion

The two patients presented here are the first described with LDHA deficiency (GSD XI) in the Spanish population. In the index case of the first family, we identified a novel homozygous nonsense variant, c.410C>A (p.Ser137Ter), in a young female patient with several episodes of rhabdomyolysis, mildly elevated hyper-CK-emia, intolerance to predominantly ‘anaerobic’ exercise (i.e., high-intensity exercise in a short time), myalgia, and psoriasis-like lesions. We also identified the c.410C>A (p.Ser137Ter) variant in a second family. The proband was compound heterozygous for another novel variant, c.750G>A (p.Trp250Ter), with a very similar clinical presentation to that of the index case from the first family, including poor tolerance to anaerobic exercise; however, the index case from the second family did not experience dermatitis.
As LDH is involved in anaerobic glycolysis, patients affected with LDHA deficiency are expected to have worse tolerance to anaerobic exercise than controls. The non-ischemic forearm exercise test in both patients reflected this deficit in anaerobic glycolysis through the lactate profile; both cases showed a flat curve, similar to the pattern reported in patients with McArdle disease (GSD V) [17]. The high increase in ammonium (Figure 2, ammonium increase of 25-30X, normal: 5-10X) can be explained as the result of the increased activity of AMPD, to compensate for the muscle energetic deficit during intense exertion in the context of LDH deficiency [3,19,20]. Marked elevations of venous pyruvate levels have also been described in patients with LDHA deficiency during the exercise test [14], although they were not measured in either of the patients presented here. Overall, the main difference in the lactate stress test results of patients with LDHA deficiency compared with those with the very common glycogenosis (i.e., GSD V) is the high response of pyruvate, as the lactate response is similar in both diseases [7,14].
Regarding biochemical results, the two patients reported here showed high serum basal CK concentrations. LDH basal levels were within reference values or slightly elevated in both cases (Table 1). The electrophoretic separation of the LDH isoenzymes showed a single band in both patients belonging to the LDH-1 or H4 isoform, demonstrating the total absence of all the isoforms in which the M subunit of the LDH enzyme participates. Furthermore, there was a marked increase in the intensity of the LDH-1 band in the patients compared with controls, compensating for the absence of the rest of the isoenzymes and partially explaining the normal (or even increased) plasma LDH levels found in both patients (Figure 4).
As noted, the two families shared the c.410C>A (p.Ser137Ter) variant, even though there was no known relationship between them. However, the index case of the first family and the mother of the second family (carrier of the shared variant) were from the same Spanish geographic region, suggesting a possible founder effect of this variant. By analyzing three SNP polymorphisms in three genes close to LDHA (distance < 100 Kbp), the same haplotype in the c.410C>A allele was observed in both families, so both families could be genetically related.
The two novel variants reported here generate a null allele, similar to most of the mutations in the LDHA gene published to date (three frameshifts, three nonsense, and one splicing). The only non-null variant published was one in-frame deletion of one amino acid (LDHA, NM_005566: c.372_374delTGT; p.Val125del) [9,21,22,23] (Table 2). Almost all of the reported patients (14 families to date) showed at least one of the three symptoms characteristic of LDHA deficiency (i.e., myopathy, rhabdomyolysis, or psoriasis-like dermatitis). Most patients with this condition have myopathy, 4/14 patients have recurrent rhabdomyolysis, and approximately half of the patients (8/14) have psoriasis-like dermatitis [6,7,8,10,12,13,14,21,24,25]. There is no genotype–phenotype correlation, as the most frequently reported mutation, a 20bp deletion of Japanese origin (c.759_778del20; p.Leu254Argfs*8), has been associated with all possible phenotypes: isolated muscle symptoms, isolated psoriasis, and both muscle symptoms and psoriasis [7,10,14,24,26].

5. Conclusions

We have identified two novel nonsense variants associated with LDHA deficiency in two young adult female patients presenting with exercise intolerance, rhabdomyolysis episodes, and psoriasis-like dermatitis (in one case). The pathogenicity of the variants has been demonstrated by the electrophoretic separation of LDH isoenzymes. At the same time, other tests, such as the lactate stress test and its characteristic profile of the pyruvate curve, as well as the clinical combination of myopathy and psoriatic-like dermatitis, may also guide the diagnosis.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, P.S.-L., J.A. and M.A.M.; methodology, C.P.-M., I.H.M., R.G.-M., A.B. and J.C.R.; software, A.B. and J.C.R.; validation, M.R., J.E., C.D.-G. and A.B.-E.; formal analysis, P.S.-L., I.H.M., J.A., A.L. and M.A.M.; investigation, P.S.-L., C.P.-M., M.R., J.E., R.G.-M. and A.B.-E.; resources, J.A. and M.A.M.; data curation, C.P.-M., I.H.M., C.D.-G. and A.B.; writing—original draft preparation, P.S.-L., I.H.M. and M.A.M.; writing—review and editing, A.L., C.P.-M., J.A. and M.A.M.; visualization, P.S.-L., M.R. and J.E.; supervision, A.L., J.A. and M.A.M.; project administration, J.A. and M.A.M.; funding acquisition, J.A. and M.A.M. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

Projects PI17_02052 to J.A. and PI21_00381 to M.A.M., funded by Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII) and co-funded by the European Union. P.S.-L. is supported by an ISCIII-CIBERER contract.

Institutional Review Board Statement

The study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the ‘Hospital Universitario 12 de Octubre’ (Madrid, Spain) (protocol code: 18/487, date of approval: 27/11/2018), and was performed in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki for Human Research.

Informed Consent Statement

All participants provided written informed consent for the study.

Data Availability Statement

The datasets and blots analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.

Acknowledgments

The authors are grateful for the support of Paloma Puerta and Carmen Tejedor with LDH isoenzymes electrophoretic separation, and the Genomics Unit from Hospital 12 de Octubre Health Research Institute (imas12) for the support with NGS and sequencing.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; or in the decision to publish the results.

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Figure 1. Psoriasis-like skin lesions in patient from Family 1 in lower (Panel A) and upper (Panel B) extremities.
Figure 1. Psoriasis-like skin lesions in patient from Family 1 in lower (Panel A) and upper (Panel B) extremities.
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Figure 2. Non-ischemic forearm exercise test from index cases of Family 1 (Panel A) and Family 2 (Panel B), showing large (~30X) increases in ammonium concentration while lactate levels barely changed. Panel C: Example of a non-ischemic forearm exercise test.
Figure 2. Non-ischemic forearm exercise test from index cases of Family 1 (Panel A) and Family 2 (Panel B), showing large (~30X) increases in ammonium concentration while lactate levels barely changed. Panel C: Example of a non-ischemic forearm exercise test.
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Figure 3. Family pedigrees illustrating both patient´s families representing the affected probands as black symbols. Rectangle −/−: wild type, +/− heterozygous, +/+ homozygous or compound heterozygote for the LDHA mutations (allele A: c.410C>A, allele B: c.750G>A). SNPs on LDHA neighboring genes HPS5 (rs76929453, +: c.1862+87T, −: c.1862+87C), TSG101 (rs2658552, +: c.549-84A, −: c.549-84G), and NAV2 (rs12283929, +: c.3972-49G, −: c.3972-49C) for haplotype analysis are represented below the genotype of the LDHA mutations.
Figure 3. Family pedigrees illustrating both patient´s families representing the affected probands as black symbols. Rectangle −/−: wild type, +/− heterozygous, +/+ homozygous or compound heterozygote for the LDHA mutations (allele A: c.410C>A, allele B: c.750G>A). SNPs on LDHA neighboring genes HPS5 (rs76929453, +: c.1862+87T, −: c.1862+87C), TSG101 (rs2658552, +: c.549-84A, −: c.549-84G), and NAV2 (rs12283929, +: c.3972-49G, −: c.3972-49C) for haplotype analysis are represented below the genotype of the LDHA mutations.
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Figure 4. Electrophoretic separation of lactate dehydrogenase isoenzymes was obtained from plasma of two healthy controls (lanes 1 and 3), the index case of Family 1 (lane 2), and the index case of Family 2 (lane 4). Only one band of LDH-1 (H4) isoenzyme with the fastest mobility to the anodic side was present in both index cases. * mark caused by loading the sample.
Figure 4. Electrophoretic separation of lactate dehydrogenase isoenzymes was obtained from plasma of two healthy controls (lanes 1 and 3), the index case of Family 1 (lane 2), and the index case of Family 2 (lane 4). Only one band of LDH-1 (H4) isoenzyme with the fastest mobility to the anodic side was present in both index cases. * mark caused by loading the sample.
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Table 1. Serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and creatine kinase (CK) basal levels from index cases of both families.
Table 1. Serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and creatine kinase (CK) basal levels from index cases of both families.
FamilyLDH (U/L)CK (U/L)
1191315
2232-247491-846
Reference values: 1 LDH 135-214 U/L. 2 CK 34-145 U/L.
Table 2. Lactate dehydrogenase A gene (LDHA) mutations and clinical symptoms.
Table 2. Lactate dehydrogenase A gene (LDHA) mutations and clinical symptoms.
FamilyAge of DiagnosisAge of OnsetNucleotide ChangeAmino Acid ChangeZygosityMyopathyMyoglobinuriaDermatological SymptomsReference
11810c.759_778del20p.Leu254Argfs*8Homozygous+++Kanno et al. [14]
2265c.759_778del20p.Leu254Argfs*8Homozygous++Maekawa et al. [24]
3239c.759_778del20p.Leu254Argfs*8Homozygous++Kanno et al. [7]
461NAc.759_778del20p.Leu254Argfs*8Homozygous+Maekawa et al. [26]
5NANAc.985G>Tp.Glu329TerHeterozygous
(carrier)
Maekawa et al. [27]
651ChildhoodNANAHomozygous+Nazzari et al. [13]
730NAc.640_641delCTp.Leu214Alafs*7Homozygous+++Bryan et al. [8]
83815c.244G>AIVS2 ds G-A -1Homozygous++Tsujino et al. [6]
91610c.372_374delTGTp.Val125delHomozygous++Takayasu et al. [21]
1055Childhoodc.759_778del20p.Leu254Argfs*8Homozygous+Ito et al. [10]
1134Childhoodc.697C>Tp.Gln233TerHomozygous++Yue et al. [12]
1254NAc.505C>Tp.Arg169TerHomozygousNANA+Kanno et al. [25]
13NANAc.58dupCp.Gln20Profs*3Heterozygous
(carrier)
NANANAKanno et al. [25]
14NANAc.759_778del20p.Leu254Argfs*8HomozygousNANANASudo [28]
151717c.410C>Ap.Ser137TerHomozygous+++Present study
161818c.410C>A
c.750G>A
p.Ser137Ter
p.Trp250Ter
Compound heterozygous++Present study
NA: No data available.Regarding psoriatic lesions, some cases have described initial skin lesions that appeared at the beginning of the disease that later evolved into a more severe form of pustular psoriasis [10,23]. The decrease in NAD+ levels due to the LDHA deficiency may lead to alterations in calcium metabolism that could induce psoriatic lesions [23,29]. It has also been proposed that the ATP decrease in keratinocytes causes the release of proinflammatory factors, such as interleukin (IL)-8, vascular endothelial growth factor, or tumor necrosis factor α [10]. In the two cases presented here, only one showed dermatological symptoms, which were exacerbated after periods of stress (e.g., school exams). In most patients described [10,23] the season of the year also seems to influence symptom severity, so environmental factors may also play a role in the development of psoriasis-like lesions.
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Serrano-Lorenzo, P.; Rabasa, M.; Esteban, J.; Hidalgo Mayoral, I.; Domínguez-González, C.; Blanco-Echevarría, A.; Garrido-Moraga, R.; Lucia, A.; Blázquez, A.; Rubio, J.C.; et al. Clinical, Biochemical, and Molecular Characterization of Two Families with Novel Mutations in the LDHA Gene (GSD XI). Genes 2022, 13, 1835. https://doi.org/10.3390/genes13101835

AMA Style

Serrano-Lorenzo P, Rabasa M, Esteban J, Hidalgo Mayoral I, Domínguez-González C, Blanco-Echevarría A, Garrido-Moraga R, Lucia A, Blázquez A, Rubio JC, et al. Clinical, Biochemical, and Molecular Characterization of Two Families with Novel Mutations in the LDHA Gene (GSD XI). Genes. 2022; 13(10):1835. https://doi.org/10.3390/genes13101835

Chicago/Turabian Style

Serrano-Lorenzo, Pablo, María Rabasa, Jesús Esteban, Irene Hidalgo Mayoral, Cristina Domínguez-González, Agustín Blanco-Echevarría, Rocío Garrido-Moraga, Alejandro Lucia, Alberto Blázquez, Juan C. Rubio, and et al. 2022. "Clinical, Biochemical, and Molecular Characterization of Two Families with Novel Mutations in the LDHA Gene (GSD XI)" Genes 13, no. 10: 1835. https://doi.org/10.3390/genes13101835

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