Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Section I Pathophysiology of pediatric liver disease
- Section II Cholestatic liver disease
- Section III Hepatitis and immune disorders
- Section IV Metabolic liver disease
- Chapter 24 Laboratory diagnosis of inborn errors of metabolism
- Chapter 25 α1-Antitrypsin deficiency
- Chapter 26 Cystic fibrosis liver disease
- Chapter 27 Inborn errors of carbohydrate metabolism
- Chapter 28 Copper metabolism and copper storage disorders
- Chapter 29 Iron storage disorders
- Chapter 30 Heme biosynthesis and the porphyrias
- Chapter 31 Tyrosinemia
- Chapter 32 Lysosomal storage disorders
- Chapter 33 Disorders of bile acid synthesis and metabolism
- Chapter 34 Inborn errors of fatty acid oxidation
- Chapter 35 Mitochondrial hepatopathies
- Chapter 36 Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in children
- Chapter 37 Peroxisomal diseases
- Chapter 38 Urea cycle disorders
- Section V Other considerations and issues in pediatric hepatology
- Index
- References
Chapter 37 - Peroxisomal diseases
from Section IV - Metabolic liver disease
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Section I Pathophysiology of pediatric liver disease
- Section II Cholestatic liver disease
- Section III Hepatitis and immune disorders
- Section IV Metabolic liver disease
- Chapter 24 Laboratory diagnosis of inborn errors of metabolism
- Chapter 25 α1-Antitrypsin deficiency
- Chapter 26 Cystic fibrosis liver disease
- Chapter 27 Inborn errors of carbohydrate metabolism
- Chapter 28 Copper metabolism and copper storage disorders
- Chapter 29 Iron storage disorders
- Chapter 30 Heme biosynthesis and the porphyrias
- Chapter 31 Tyrosinemia
- Chapter 32 Lysosomal storage disorders
- Chapter 33 Disorders of bile acid synthesis and metabolism
- Chapter 34 Inborn errors of fatty acid oxidation
- Chapter 35 Mitochondrial hepatopathies
- Chapter 36 Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in children
- Chapter 37 Peroxisomal diseases
- Chapter 38 Urea cycle disorders
- Section V Other considerations and issues in pediatric hepatology
- Index
- References
Summary
General aspects of peroxisomes
Peroxisomes were first identified in renal proximal tubule cells by a Swedish graduate student in 1954. Initially called microbodies, these organelles were studied intensively by de Duve and coworkers. Because they contained enzymes that both produced (e.g. amino acid and urate oxidases) and degraded (e.g. catalase) hydrogen peroxide, de Duve proposed the name peroxisomes [1]. Microbodies found in some lower organisms and plants were named for the specialized functions that they carry out. For example, glyoxysomes of fungi and plants contain the five enzymes of the glyoxylate cycle and glycosomes house the enzymes of glycolysis in trypanosomes. While peroxisomes have been found in essentially all plant and animal cells with the exception of mature erythrocytes, they range in size from about 0.1μm (microperoxisomes of intestine and brain) up to 1.0μm (characteristic of hepatic and renal peroxisomes; range: 0.2–1.0μm) (Figure 37.1).
A single lipid bilayer comprises the peroxisomal membrane. The organelle’s matrix is finely granular, but microcrystalline cores of urate oxidase are present in the hepatic peroxisomes of some species (e.g. rats). No cores are found in human peroxisomes as humans lack urate oxidase. Unlike chloroplasts and mitochondria, peroxisomes contain no DNA although it has been speculated that all three organelles evolved from endosymbionts. Since the discovery of peroxisomes, numerous membrane proteins and matrix enzymes have been identified. Much research on peroxisomes has been fueled by the identification of patients whose cells lack either normal appearing organelles or one or more peroxisomal metabolic functions.
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- Information
- Liver Disease in Children , pp. 649 - 663Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014