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In vitro expression analysis of mutations in phenylalanine hydroxylase: Linking genotype to phenotype and structure to function

✍ Scribed by Paula J. Waters; Michael A. Parniak; Piotr Nowacki; Charles R. Scriver


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
231 KB
Volume
11
Category
Article
ISSN
1059-7794

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✦ Synopsis


Mutations in the human phenylalanine hydroxylase gene (PAH) altering the expressed cDNA nucleotide sequence (GenBank U49897) can impair activity of the corresponding enzyme product (hepatic phenylalanine hydroxylase, PAH) and cause hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA), a metabolic phenotype for which the major disease form is phenylketonuria (PKU; OMIM 261600). In vitro expression analysis of inherited human mutations in eukaryotic, prokaryotic, and cell-free systems is informative about the mechanisms of mutation effects on enzymatic activity and their predicted effect on the metabolic phenotype. Corresponding analysis of site-directed mutations in rat Pah cDNA has assigned critical functional roles to individual amino acid residues within the best understood species of phenylalanine hydroxylase. Data on in vitro expression of 35 inherited human mutations and 22 created rat mutations are reviewed here. The core data are accessible at the PAH Mutation Analysis Consortium Web site (http://www.mcgill.ca/pahdb).