Maternal heterozygosity of Slc6a19 causes metabolic perturbation and congenital NAD deficiency disorder in mice

Cuny, Hartmut and Bozon, Kayleigh and Kirk, Rosemary B. and Sheng, Delicia Z. and Bröer, Stefan and Dunwoodie, Sally L. (2022) Maternal heterozygosity of Slc6a19 causes metabolic perturbation and congenital NAD deficiency disorder in mice. Disease Models & Mechanisms, 16 (5). ISSN 1754-8403

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Maternal-heterozygosity-of-Slc6a19-causes-metabolic-perturbation-and-congenital-NAD-deficiency-disorder-in-miceDMM-Disease-Models-and-Mechanisms.pdf
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Link to published document: http://doi.org/10.1242/dmm.049647

Abstract

Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) is a key metabolite synthesised from vitamin B3 or tryptophan. Disruption of genes encoding NAD synthesis enzymes reduces NAD levels and causes congenital NAD deficiency disorder (CNDD), characterised by multiple congenital malformations. SLC6A19 (encoding B0AT1, a neutral amino acid transporter), represents the main transporter for free tryptophan in the intestine and kidney. Here, we tested whether Slc6a19 heterozygosity in mice limits the tryptophan available for NAD synthesis during pregnancy and causes adverse pregnancy outcomes. Pregnant Slc6a19+/- mice were fed diets depleted of vitamin B3, so that tryptophan was the source of NAD during gestation. This perturbed the NAD metabolome in pregnant Slc6a19+/- females, resulting in reduced NAD levels and increased rates of embryo loss. Surviving embryos were small and exhibited specific combinations of CNDD-associated malformations. Our results show that genes not directly involved in NAD synthesis can affect NAD metabolism and cause CNDD. They also suggest that human female carriers of a SLC6A19 loss-of-function allele might be susceptible to adverse pregnancy outcomes unless sufficient NAD precursor amounts are available during gestation. This article has an associated First Person interview with the first author of the paper.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: R Medicine > R Medicine (General)
Depositing User: Repository Administrator
Date Deposited: 06 Mar 2023 04:30
Last Modified: 10 Mar 2023 06:27
URI: https://eprints.victorchang.edu.au/id/eprint/1350

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