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A novel bile acid biosynthesis defect due to a deficiency of peroxisomal ABCD3

Sacha Ferdinandusse, Gerardo Jiménez‐Sánchez, Janet Koster, Simone Denis, C W van Roermund, Irma Silva‐Zolezzi, Ann B. Moser, Wouter F. Visser, Mine Güllüoğlu, Özlem Durmaz, Mübeccel Demirkol, Hans R. Waterham, Gülden Gökçay, Ronald J. A. Wanders, David Valle

Human Molecular Genetics · 2014 · ▲ 137 citations

Abstract

ABCD3 is one of three ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters present in the peroxisomal membrane catalyzing ATP-dependent transport of substrates for metabolic pathways localized in peroxisomes. So far, the precise function of ABCD3 is not known. Here, we report the identification of the first patient with a defect of ABCD3. The patient presented with hepatosplenomegaly and severe liver disease and showed a striking accumulation of peroxisomal C27-bile acid intermediates in plasma. Investigation of peroxisomal parameters in skin fibroblasts revealed a reduced number of enlarged import-competent peroxisomes. Peroxisomal beta-oxidation of C26:0 was normal, but beta-oxidation of pristanic acid was reduced. Genetic analysis revealed a homozygous deletion at the DNA level of 1758bp, predicted to result in a truncated ABCD3 protein lacking the C-terminal 24 amino acids (p.Y635NfsX1). Liver disease progressed and the patient required liver transplantation at 4 years of age but expired shortly after transplantation. To corroborate our findings in the patient, we studied a previously generated Abcd3 knockout mouse model. Abcd3-/- mice accumulated the branched chain fatty acid phytanic acid after phytol loading. In addition, analysis of bile acids revealed a reduction of C24 bile acids, whereas C27-bile acid intermediates were significantly increased in liver, bile and intestine of Abcd3-/- mice. Thus, both in the patient and in Abcd3-/- mice, there was evidence of a bile acid biosynthesis defect. In conclusion, our studies show that ABCD3 is involved in transport of branched-chain fatty acids and C27 bile acids into the peroxisome and that this is a crucial step in bile acid biosynthesis.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1093/hmg/ddu448
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2026-06-23 MST

Cite this

APA
Ferdinandusse, S., Jiménez‐Sánchez, G., Koster, J., Denis, S., Roermund, C.W.V., Silva‐Zolezzi, I., Moser, A.B., Visser, W.F., Güllüoğlu, M., Durmaz, �., Demirkol, M., Waterham, H.R., Gökçay, G., Wanders, R.J.A., &amp; Valle, D. (2014). A novel bile acid biosynthesis defect due to a deficiency of peroxisomal ABCD3. <em>Human Molecular Genetics</em>. https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddu448
Vancouver
Ferdinandusse S, Jiménez‐Sánchez G, Koster J, Denis S, Roermund CWV, Silva‐Zolezzi I, et al. A novel bile acid biosynthesis defect due to a deficiency of peroxisomal ABCD3. Human Molecular Genetics. 2014. doi:10.1093/hmg/ddu448.
BibTeX
@unpublished{sacha2014Anovel, title = {A novel bile acid biosynthesis defect due to a deficiency of peroxisomal ABCD3}, author = {Sacha Ferdinandusse and Gerardo Jiménez‐Sánchez and Janet Koster and Simone Denis and C W van Roermund and Irma Silva‐Zolezzi and Ann B. Moser and Wouter F. Visser and Mine Güllüoğlu and Özlem Durmaz and Mübeccel Demirkol and Hans R. Waterham and Gülden Gökçay and Ronald J. A. Wanders and David Valle}, journal = {Human Molecular Genetics}, year = {2014}, doi = {10.1093/hmg/ddu448}, }

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