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Biochemical and mutational analyses of the cathepsin c gene (CTSC) in three North American families with Papillon Lefèvre syndrome

✍ Scribed by Y. Zhang; P.S. Hart; A.J. Moretti; O.J. Bouwsma; E.M. Fisher; L. Dudlicek; M.J. Pettenati; T.C. Hart


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
186 KB
Volume
20
Category
Article
ISSN
1059-7794

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✦ Synopsis


Papillon Lefèvre syndrome (PLS) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by palmoplantar hyperkeratosis and severe periodontitis. The disease is caused by mutations in the cathepsin C gene (CTSC) that maps to chromosome 11q14. CTSC gene mutations associated with PLS have been correlated with significantly decreased enzyme activity. Mutational analysis of the CTSC gene in three North American families segregating PLS identified four mutations, including a novel mutation p.G139R. All mutations were associated with dramatically reduced CTSC protease enzyme activity. A homozygous c.96T>G transversion resulting in a p.Y32X change was present in a Mexican PLS proband, while one Caucasian PLS proband was a compound heterozygote for the p.Y32X and p.R272P (c.815G>C) mutations. The other Caucasian PLS proband was a compound heterozygote for c.415G>A transition and c.1141delC mutations that resulted in a p.G139R and a frameshift and premature termination (p.L381fsX393), respectively. The c.415G>A was not present in more than 300 controls, suggesting it is not a CTSC polymorphism. Biochemical analysis demonstrated almost no detectable CTSC activity in leukocytes of all three probands. These mutations altered restriction enzyme sites in the highly conserved CTSC gene. Sequence analysis of CTSC exon 3 confirmed the previously reported p.T153I polymorphism in 4 of the 5 ethnically diverse populations studied.


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Loss-of-function mutations in cathepsin
✍ Susanne F. de Haar; D. (Ineke) C. Jansen; Ton Schoenmaker; Hilde De Vree; Vincen 📂 Article 📅 2004 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 340 KB

Papillon-Lefèvre syndrome (PLS) is a rare autosomal recessive disease that involves severe periodontitis and hyperkeratosis of the hand palms and foot soles. Recently it was found that PLS patients carry loss-of-function mutations in the gene encoding cathepsin C (CTSC). In the present study we have