1. Academic Validation
  2. Identification of a putative lysosomal cobalamin exporter altered in the cblF defect of vitamin B12 metabolism

Identification of a putative lysosomal cobalamin exporter altered in the cblF defect of vitamin B12 metabolism

  • Nat Genet. 2009 Feb;41(2):234-9. doi: 10.1038/ng.294.
Frank Rutsch 1 Susann Gailus Isabelle R Miousse Terttu Suormala Corinne Sagné Mohammad Reza Toliat Gudrun Nürnberg Tanja Wittkampf Insa Buers Azita Sharifi Martin Stucki Christian Becker Matthias Baumgartner Horst Robenek Thorsten Marquardt Wolfgang Höhne Bruno Gasnier David S Rosenblatt Brian Fowler Peter Nürnberg
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of General Pediatrics, Münster University Children's Hospital, Albert-Schweitzer-Strasse 33, D-48149 Münster, Germany. [email protected]
Abstract

Vitamin B(12) (cobalamin) is essential in Animals for metabolism of branched chain Amino acids and odd chain fatty acids, and for remethylation of homocysteine to methionine. In the cblF inborn error of vitamin B(12) metabolism, free vitamin accumulates in lysosomes, thus hindering its conversion to cofactors. Using homozygosity mapping in 12 unrelated cblF individuals and microcell-mediated chromosome transfer, we identified a candidate gene on chromosome 6q13, LMBRD1, encoding LMBD1, a lysosomal membrane protein with homology to lipocalin membrane receptor LIMR. We identified five different frameshift mutations in LMBRD1 resulting in loss of LMBD1 function, with 18 of the 24 disease chromosomes carrying the same mutation embedded in a common 1.34-Mb haplotype. Transfection of fibroblasts of individuals with cblF with wild-type LMBD1 rescued cobalamin coenzyme synthesis and function. This work identifies LMBRD1 as the gene underlying the cblF defect of cobalamin metabolism and suggests that LMBD1 is a lysosomal membrane exporter for cobalamin.

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