Reaction: Defective HEXA does not cleave the terminal GalNAc from keratan sulfate

- in pathway: Defective HEXA causes GM2G1
Beta-hexosaminidase A (HEXA) cleaves the terminal N-acetyl galactosamine (GalNAc) from glucosaminoglycans (GAGs) and any other molecules containing a terminal GalNAc. Defects in the alpha subunits are the cause of GM2-gangliosidosis type 1 (GM2G1; MIM:272800), also known as Tay-Sachs disease (Nakano et al. 1988). The severest form of Tay-Sachs disease, infant-onset, is characterised by neurodegeneration, blindness and death by age 2 or 3. Hexosaminidase activity in this form of the disease is below 10% of normal levels (Okada et al. 1971). The most frequent mutation of infant-onset Tay-Sachs disease of Ashkenazi Jews is a 4-bp insertion in exon 11. This mutation introduces a premature termination signal (p.Y427Ifs*5) resulting in a deficienct mRNA (Myerowitz & Costigan 1988).

More than 100 mutations in HEXA have been identified to date with varying severity of disease. The next most common mutation produces abnormally processed RNA; a G to C transversion at the 5' end of intron 12 (Arpaia et al. 1988, Myerowitz 1988) (not annotated here). This mutation, together with Y427Ifs*5, account for ~97% of the HEXA gene mutations in the Ashkenazi Jewish population (Mahuran 1995).
Reaction - small molecule participants:
H2O [lysosomal lumen]
GlcNAc-Gal-GlcNAc(S)-Gal [lysosomal lumen]
Reactome.org reaction link: R-HSA-9035978

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Reaction input - small molecules:
water
ChEBI:15377
beta-D-GlcpNAc-(1->3)-beta-D-Galp-(1->4)-beta-D-GlcpNAc6S-(1->3)-D-Galp
ChEBI:63852
Reaction output - small molecules:
Reactome.org link: R-HSA-9035978