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Inborn Errors of Nucleoside Transporter (NT)-Encoding Genes (SLC28 and SLC29)

The proper regulation of nucleotide pools is essential for all types of cellular functions and depends on de novo nucleotide biosynthesis, salvage, and degradation pathways. Despite the apparent essentiality of these processes, a significant number of rare diseases associated with mutations in genes...

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Autores principales: Pastor-Anglada, Marçal, Mata-Ventosa, Aida, Pérez-Torras, Sandra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9369021/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35955904
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23158770
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author Pastor-Anglada, Marçal
Mata-Ventosa, Aida
Pérez-Torras, Sandra
author_facet Pastor-Anglada, Marçal
Mata-Ventosa, Aida
Pérez-Torras, Sandra
author_sort Pastor-Anglada, Marçal
collection PubMed
description The proper regulation of nucleotide pools is essential for all types of cellular functions and depends on de novo nucleotide biosynthesis, salvage, and degradation pathways. Despite the apparent essentiality of these processes, a significant number of rare diseases associated with mutations in genes encoding various enzymes of these pathways have been already identified, and others are likely yet to come. However, knowledge on genetic alterations impacting on nucleoside and nucleobase transporters is still limited. At this moment three gene-encoding nucleoside and nucleobase transporter proteins have been reported to be mutated in humans, SLC29A1, SLC29A3, and SLC28A1, impacting on the expression and function of ENT1, ENT3, and CNT1, respectively. ENT1 alterations determine Augustine-null blood type and cause ectopic calcification during aging. ENT3 deficiency translates into various clinical manifestations and syndromes, altogether listed in the OMIM catalog as histiocytosis-lymphoadenopathy plus syndrome (OMIM#602782). CNT1 deficiency causes uridine-cytidineuria (URCTU) (OMIM#618477), a unique type of pyrimidineuria with an as yet not well-known clinical impact. Increasing knowledge on the physiological, molecular and structural features of these transporter proteins is helping us to better understand the biological basis behind the biochemical and clinical manifestations caused by these deficiencies. Moreover, they also support the view that some metabolic compensation might occur in these disturbances, because they do not seem to significantly impact nucleotide homeostasis, but rather other biological events associated with particular subtypes of transporter proteins.
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spelling pubmed-93690212022-08-12 Inborn Errors of Nucleoside Transporter (NT)-Encoding Genes (SLC28 and SLC29) Pastor-Anglada, Marçal Mata-Ventosa, Aida Pérez-Torras, Sandra Int J Mol Sci Review The proper regulation of nucleotide pools is essential for all types of cellular functions and depends on de novo nucleotide biosynthesis, salvage, and degradation pathways. Despite the apparent essentiality of these processes, a significant number of rare diseases associated with mutations in genes encoding various enzymes of these pathways have been already identified, and others are likely yet to come. However, knowledge on genetic alterations impacting on nucleoside and nucleobase transporters is still limited. At this moment three gene-encoding nucleoside and nucleobase transporter proteins have been reported to be mutated in humans, SLC29A1, SLC29A3, and SLC28A1, impacting on the expression and function of ENT1, ENT3, and CNT1, respectively. ENT1 alterations determine Augustine-null blood type and cause ectopic calcification during aging. ENT3 deficiency translates into various clinical manifestations and syndromes, altogether listed in the OMIM catalog as histiocytosis-lymphoadenopathy plus syndrome (OMIM#602782). CNT1 deficiency causes uridine-cytidineuria (URCTU) (OMIM#618477), a unique type of pyrimidineuria with an as yet not well-known clinical impact. Increasing knowledge on the physiological, molecular and structural features of these transporter proteins is helping us to better understand the biological basis behind the biochemical and clinical manifestations caused by these deficiencies. Moreover, they also support the view that some metabolic compensation might occur in these disturbances, because they do not seem to significantly impact nucleotide homeostasis, but rather other biological events associated with particular subtypes of transporter proteins. MDPI 2022-08-07 /pmc/articles/PMC9369021/ /pubmed/35955904 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23158770 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Pastor-Anglada, Marçal
Mata-Ventosa, Aida
Pérez-Torras, Sandra
Inborn Errors of Nucleoside Transporter (NT)-Encoding Genes (SLC28 and SLC29)
title Inborn Errors of Nucleoside Transporter (NT)-Encoding Genes (SLC28 and SLC29)
title_full Inborn Errors of Nucleoside Transporter (NT)-Encoding Genes (SLC28 and SLC29)
title_fullStr Inborn Errors of Nucleoside Transporter (NT)-Encoding Genes (SLC28 and SLC29)
title_full_unstemmed Inborn Errors of Nucleoside Transporter (NT)-Encoding Genes (SLC28 and SLC29)
title_short Inborn Errors of Nucleoside Transporter (NT)-Encoding Genes (SLC28 and SLC29)
title_sort inborn errors of nucleoside transporter (nt)-encoding genes (slc28 and slc29)
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9369021/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35955904
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23158770
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