Affiliation:
1. Department of Human Genetics Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta Georgia USA
Abstract
AbstractClassic galactosemia (CG) is an autosomal recessive disorder that results from profound deficiency of galactose‐1‐phosphate uridylyltransferase (GALT), the middle enzyme in the highly conserved Leloir pathway of galactose metabolism. That galactose metabolism is disrupted in patients with CG, and in GALT‐null microbial, cell culture, and animal models of CG, has been known for many years. However, whether the long‐term developmental complications of CG result from disrupted galactose metabolism alone, or from loss of some independent moonlighting function of GALT, in addition to disrupted galactose metabolism, has been posed but never resolved. Here, we addressed this question using a GALT‐null Drosophila melanogaster model of CG engineered to express uridine diphosphate (UDP)‐glucose/galactose pyrophosphorylase (UGGP), a plant enzyme that effectively bypasses GALT in the Leloir pathway by converting substrates uridine triphosphate (UTP) plus galactose‐1‐phosphate (gal‐1P) into products UDP‐galactose plus pyrophosphate (PPi). While GALT and UGGP share one substrate (gal‐1P) and one product (UDP‐galactose), they are structurally and evolutionarily unrelated enzymes. It is therefore extremely unlikely that they would also share a moonlighting function. We found that GALT‐null flies expressing UGGP showed not only partial rescue of metabolic abnormalities and acute larval sensitivity to dietary galactose, as expected, but also full rescue of an adult motor deficit otherwise seen in this model. By extension, these results may offer insights to the underlying bases of at least some acute and long‐term complications experienced by patients with CG.
Funder
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases