1. Academic Validation
  2. Lathosterolosis: an inborn error of human and murine cholesterol synthesis due to lathosterol 5-desaturase deficiency

Lathosterolosis: an inborn error of human and murine cholesterol synthesis due to lathosterol 5-desaturase deficiency

  • Hum Mol Genet. 2003 Jul 1;12(13):1631-41. doi: 10.1093/hmg/ddg172.
Patrycja A Krakowiak 1 Christopher A Wassif Lisa Kratz Diana Cozma Martina Kovárová Ginny Harris Alexander Grinberg Yinzi Yang Alasdair G W Hunter Maria Tsokos Richard I Kelley Forbes D Porter
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Unit on Molecular Dysmorphology, Heritable Disorders Branch, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Abstract

Lathosterol 5-desaturase catalyzes the conversion of lathosterol to 7-dehydrocholesterol in the next to last step of Cholesterol synthesis. Inborn errors of Cholesterol synthesis underlie a group of human malformation syndromes including Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome, desmosterolosis, CHILD syndrome, CDPX2 and lathosterolosis. We disrupted the lathosterol 5-desaturase gene (Sc5d ) in order to further our understanding of the pathophysiological processes underlying these disorders and to gain insight into the corresponding human disorder. Sc5d (-/-) pups were stillborn, had elevated lathosterol and decreased Cholesterol levels, had craniofacial defects including cleft palate and micrognathia, and limb patterning defects. Many of the malformations found in Sc5d (-/-) mice are consistent with impaired Hedgehog signaling, and appear to be a result of decreased Cholesterol rather than increased lathosterol. A patient initially described as atypical SLOS with mucolipidosis was shown to have lathosterolosis by biochemical and molecular analysis. We identified a homozygous mutation of SC5D (137A>C, Y46S) in this patient. An unique aspect of the lathosterolosis phenotype is the combination of a malformation syndrome with an intracellular storage defect.

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