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Defective high-affinity thiamine transporter leads to cell death in thiamine-responsive megaloblastic anemia syndrome fibroblasts
Amy R. Stagg, Judith C. Fleming, Meghan A. Baker, Massayuki Sakamoto, Nadine Cohen, Ellis J. Neufeld
Amy R. Stagg, Judith C. Fleming, Meghan A. Baker, Massayuki Sakamoto, Nadine Cohen, Ellis J. Neufeld
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Article

Defective high-affinity thiamine transporter leads to cell death in thiamine-responsive megaloblastic anemia syndrome fibroblasts

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Abstract

We have investigated the cellular pathology of the syndrome called thiamine-responsive megaloblastic anemia (TRMA) with diabetes and deafness. Cultured diploid fibroblasts were grown in thiamine-free medium and dialyzed serum. Normal fibroblasts survived indefinitely without supplemental thiamine, whereas patient cells died in 5–14 days (mean 9.5 days), and heterozygous cells survived for more than 30 days. TRMA fibroblasts were rescued from death with 10–30 nM thiamine (in the range of normal plasma thiamine concentrations). Positive terminal deoxynucleotide transferase–mediated dUTP nick end-labeling (TUNEL) staining suggested that cell death was due to apoptosis. We assessed cellular uptake of [3H]thiamine at submicromolar concentrations. Normal fibroblasts exhibited saturable, high-affinity thiamine uptake (Km 400–550 nM; Vmax 11 pmol/min/106 cells) in addition to a low-affinity unsaturable component. Mutant cells lacked detectable high-affinity uptake. At 30 nM thiamine, the rate of uptake of thiamine by TRMA fibroblasts was 10-fold less than that of wild-type, and cells from obligate heterozygotes had an intermediate phenotype. Transfection of TRMA fibroblasts with the yeast thiamine transporter gene THI10 prevented cell death when cells were grown in the absence of supplemental thiamine. We therefore propose that the primary abnormality in TRMA is absence of a high-affinity thiamine transporter and that low intracellular thiamine concentrations in the mutant cells cause biochemical abnormalities that lead to apoptotic cell death.

Authors

Amy R. Stagg, Judith C. Fleming, Meghan A. Baker, Massayuki Sakamoto, Nadine Cohen, Ellis J. Neufeld

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Figure 3

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Concentration dependence of high-affinity thiamine uptake in normal fibr...
Concentration dependence of high-affinity thiamine uptake in normal fibroblasts. Cells were labeled with 66 nM [3H]thiamine diluted with unlabeled thiamine for 30 min at 37°C. Values are corrected for nonspecific uptake by subtracting counts associated with the presence of 500-fold excess unlabeled compound. Results are shown for two separate experiments (solid line with triangles and dotted line with circles), done on different days with different wild-type cell lines. Inset: double reciprocal plot; the 800-nM point was eliminated as an outlier. All other data from the rectangular plot were included. The least-squares regression line gives an apparent Km of 550 nM; apparent Vmax for uptake is 11 pmol/106 cells/30 min. Each point is the mean of duplicate wells ± range (error bars).

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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