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ALAD Inhibition by Porphobilinogen Rationalizes the Accumulation of δ-Aminolevulinate in Acute Porphyrias.

Biochemistry 2022 October 15
Patients with major forms of acute hepatic porphyria present acute neurological attacks with overproduction of porphobilinogen (PBG) and δ-aminolevulinic acid (ALA). Even if ALA is considered the most likely agent inducing the acute symptoms, the mechanism of its accumulation has not been experimentally demonstrated. In the most frequent form, acute intermittent porphyria (AIP), inherited gene mutations induce a deficiency in PBG deaminase; thus, accumulation of the substrate PBG is biochemically obligated but not that of ALA. A similar scenario is observed in other forms of acute hepatic porphyria (i.e., porphyria variegate, VP) in which PBG deaminase is inhibited by metabolic intermediates. Here, we have investigated the molecular basis of δ-aminolevulinate accumulation using in vitro fluxomics monitored by NMR spectroscopy and other biophysical techniques. Our results show that porphobilinogen, the natural product of δ-aminolevulinate deaminase, effectively inhibits its anabolic enzyme at abnormally low concentrations. Structurally, this high affinity can be explained by the interactions that porphobilinogen generates with the active site, most of them shared with the substrate. Enzymatically, our flux analysis of an altered heme pathway demonstrates that a minimum accumulation of porphobilinogen will immediately trigger the accumulation of δ-aminolevulinate, a long-lasting observation in patients suffering from acute porphyrias.

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