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Reinvestigation of Peroxisomal 3-Ketoacyl-CoA Thiolase Deficiency: Identification of the True Defect at the Level of d-Bifunctional Protein

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In this report, we reinvestigate the only patient ever reported with a deficiency of peroxisomal 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase (THIO). At the time when they were described, the abnormalities in this patient, which included accumulation of very-long-chain fatty acids and the bile-acid intermediate trihydroxycholestanoic acid, were believed to be the logical consequence of a deficiency of the peroxisomal β-oxidation enzyme THIO. In light of the current knowledge of the peroxisomal β-oxidation system, however, the reported biochemical aberrations can no longer be explained by a deficiency of this thiolase. In this study, we show that the true defect in this patient is at the level of d-bifunctional protein (DBP). Immunoblot analysis revealed the absence of DBP in postmortem brain of the patient, whereas THIO was normally present. In addition, we found that the patient had a homozygous deletion of part of exon 3 and intron 3 of the DBP gene, resulting in skipping of exon 3 at the cDNA level. Our findings imply that the group of single–peroxisomal β-oxidation–enzyme deficiencies is limited to straight-chain acyl-CoA oxidase, DBP, and α-methylacyl-CoA racemase deficiency and that there is no longer evidence for the existence of THIO deficiency as a distinct clinical entity.

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