Biomolecules (Feb 2023)

A 20-Year Longitudinal Study of Plasma Chitotriosidase Activity in Treated Gaucher Disease Type 1 and 3 Patients—A Qualitative and Quantitative Approach

  • Paulina Szymańska-Rożek,
  • Barbara Czartoryska,
  • Grazina Kleinotiene,
  • Patryk Lipiński,
  • Anna Tylki-Szymańska,
  • Agnieszka Ługowska

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biom13030436
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
p. 436

Abstract

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Chitotriosidase is an enzyme produced and secreted in large amounts by activated macrophages, especially macrophages loaded with phagocytozed glycosphingolipid in Gaucher disease. Macrophages phagocytose decayed blood cells that contain a lot of sphingolipid-rich cell membranes. In Gaucher disease, due to a deficit in beta-glucocerebrosidase activity, the phagocytozed substrate glucocerebroside cannot undergo further catabolism. In such a situation, macrophages secrete chitotriosidase in proportion to the degree of overload. Gaucher disease (GD) is a recessively inherited disorder resulting in storage of glucosylceramide (GlcCer) in lysosomes of tissue macrophages. It is directly caused by the deficiency of beta-glucocerebrosidase (GBA) activity. Chitotriosidase has been measured systematically each year in the same group of 49 patients with type 1 and 3 GD for over 20 years. Our analysis showed that chitotriosidase is very sensitive biomarker to enzyme replacement therapy (ERT). The response to treatment introduction is of an almost immediate nature, lowering pathologically high chitotriosidase levels by a factor of 2 in a time scale of 8 months, on average. Long term enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) brings chitotriosidase activity close to reference values. Finally, reducing the dose of ERT quickly boosts chitotriosidase activity, but restoring the initial dose of treatment brings chitotriosidase level of activity back onto the decreasing time trajectory.

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