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Strategies to Rescue the Consequences of Inducible Arginase-1 Deficiency in Mice

Arginase-1 catalyzes the conversion of arginine to ornithine and urea, which is the final step of the urea cycle used to remove excess ammonia from the body. Arginase-1 deficiency leads to hyperargininemia in mice and man with severe lethal consequences in the former and progressive neurological imp...

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Autores principales: Ballantyne, Laurel L., Sin, Yuan Yan, St. Amand, Tim, Si, Joshua, Goossens, Steven, Haenebalcke, Lieven, Haigh, Jody J., Kyriakopoulou, Lianna, Schulze, Andreas, Funk, Colin D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4418594/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25938595
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125967
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author Ballantyne, Laurel L.
Sin, Yuan Yan
St. Amand, Tim
Si, Joshua
Goossens, Steven
Haenebalcke, Lieven
Haigh, Jody J.
Kyriakopoulou, Lianna
Schulze, Andreas
Funk, Colin D.
author_facet Ballantyne, Laurel L.
Sin, Yuan Yan
St. Amand, Tim
Si, Joshua
Goossens, Steven
Haenebalcke, Lieven
Haigh, Jody J.
Kyriakopoulou, Lianna
Schulze, Andreas
Funk, Colin D.
author_sort Ballantyne, Laurel L.
collection PubMed
description Arginase-1 catalyzes the conversion of arginine to ornithine and urea, which is the final step of the urea cycle used to remove excess ammonia from the body. Arginase-1 deficiency leads to hyperargininemia in mice and man with severe lethal consequences in the former and progressive neurological impairment to varying degrees in the latter. In a tamoxifen-induced arginase-1 deficient mouse model, mice succumb to the enzyme deficiency within 2 weeks after inducing the knockout and retain <2 % enzyme in the liver. Standard clinical care regimens for arginase-1 deficiency (low-protein diet, the nitrogen-scavenging drug sodium phenylbutyrate, ornithine supplementation) either failed to extend lifespan (ornithine) or only minimally prolonged lifespan (maximum 8 days with low-protein diet and drug). A conditional, tamoxifen-inducible arginase-1 transgenic mouse strain expressing the enzyme from the Rosa26 locus modestly extended lifespan of neonatal mice, but not that of 4-week old mice, when crossed to the inducible arginase-1 knockout mouse strain. Delivery of an arginase-1/enhanced green fluorescent fusion construct by adeno-associated viral delivery (rh10 serotype with a strong cytomegalovirus-chicken β-actin hybrid promoter) rescued about 30% of male mice with lifespan prolongation to at least 6 months, extensive hepatic expression and restoration of significant enzyme activity in liver. In contrast, a vector of the AAV8 serotype driven by the thyroxine-binding globulin promoter led to weaker liver expression and did not rescue arginase-1 deficient mice to any great extent. Since the induced arginase-1 deficient mouse model displays a much more severe phenotype when compared to human arginase-1 deficiency, these studies reveal that it may be feasible with gene therapy strategies to correct the various manifestations of the disorder and they provide optimism for future clinical studies.
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spelling pubmed-44185942015-05-12 Strategies to Rescue the Consequences of Inducible Arginase-1 Deficiency in Mice Ballantyne, Laurel L. Sin, Yuan Yan St. Amand, Tim Si, Joshua Goossens, Steven Haenebalcke, Lieven Haigh, Jody J. Kyriakopoulou, Lianna Schulze, Andreas Funk, Colin D. PLoS One Research Article Arginase-1 catalyzes the conversion of arginine to ornithine and urea, which is the final step of the urea cycle used to remove excess ammonia from the body. Arginase-1 deficiency leads to hyperargininemia in mice and man with severe lethal consequences in the former and progressive neurological impairment to varying degrees in the latter. In a tamoxifen-induced arginase-1 deficient mouse model, mice succumb to the enzyme deficiency within 2 weeks after inducing the knockout and retain <2 % enzyme in the liver. Standard clinical care regimens for arginase-1 deficiency (low-protein diet, the nitrogen-scavenging drug sodium phenylbutyrate, ornithine supplementation) either failed to extend lifespan (ornithine) or only minimally prolonged lifespan (maximum 8 days with low-protein diet and drug). A conditional, tamoxifen-inducible arginase-1 transgenic mouse strain expressing the enzyme from the Rosa26 locus modestly extended lifespan of neonatal mice, but not that of 4-week old mice, when crossed to the inducible arginase-1 knockout mouse strain. Delivery of an arginase-1/enhanced green fluorescent fusion construct by adeno-associated viral delivery (rh10 serotype with a strong cytomegalovirus-chicken β-actin hybrid promoter) rescued about 30% of male mice with lifespan prolongation to at least 6 months, extensive hepatic expression and restoration of significant enzyme activity in liver. In contrast, a vector of the AAV8 serotype driven by the thyroxine-binding globulin promoter led to weaker liver expression and did not rescue arginase-1 deficient mice to any great extent. Since the induced arginase-1 deficient mouse model displays a much more severe phenotype when compared to human arginase-1 deficiency, these studies reveal that it may be feasible with gene therapy strategies to correct the various manifestations of the disorder and they provide optimism for future clinical studies. Public Library of Science 2015-05-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4418594/ /pubmed/25938595 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125967 Text en © 2015 Ballantyne et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ballantyne, Laurel L.
Sin, Yuan Yan
St. Amand, Tim
Si, Joshua
Goossens, Steven
Haenebalcke, Lieven
Haigh, Jody J.
Kyriakopoulou, Lianna
Schulze, Andreas
Funk, Colin D.
Strategies to Rescue the Consequences of Inducible Arginase-1 Deficiency in Mice
title Strategies to Rescue the Consequences of Inducible Arginase-1 Deficiency in Mice
title_full Strategies to Rescue the Consequences of Inducible Arginase-1 Deficiency in Mice
title_fullStr Strategies to Rescue the Consequences of Inducible Arginase-1 Deficiency in Mice
title_full_unstemmed Strategies to Rescue the Consequences of Inducible Arginase-1 Deficiency in Mice
title_short Strategies to Rescue the Consequences of Inducible Arginase-1 Deficiency in Mice
title_sort strategies to rescue the consequences of inducible arginase-1 deficiency in mice
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4418594/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25938595
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125967
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