New transthyretin variants SER 91 and SER 116 associated with familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy
✍ Scribed by AM Misrahi; V Plante; T Lalu; I Serre; D Adams; DC Lacroix; G Saïd
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 53 KB
- Volume
- 12
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1059-7794
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✦ Synopsis
Mutations of the transthyretin (TTR) gene are associated with familial amyloïdotic polyneuropathy (FAP). Two new mutations were detected in French patients with TTR amyloïdosis. The first patient was a 72 year old man who presented with severe and rapidly evolving sensory motor polyneuropathy of the 4 limbs, a bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome and a restrictive cardiomyopathy. His father died after a clinical history suggestive in retrospect of TTR amyloïdosis. The second patient was a 75 year old man who presented with axonal sensory neuropathy of the 4 limbs and a bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome. In both cases immunohistochemistry performed on a nerve biopsy revealed TTR positive amyloid.
Direct genomic sequencing of the full TTR gene coding region indicated two heterozygous transversions encoding Ser for Ala 91 substitution in the third exon of the gene in patient 1 and Ser for Tyr 116 substitution in the fourth exon of the gene in patient 2. The mutations were confirmed by digesting PCR products with restriction enzymes and were not found in a control population of 100 unrelated individuals. The Ser 116 substitution was also detected in the daughter and the 70 year old sister of the proband. However the absence of symptomatology suggestive of TTR amyloïdosis may be related to the late onset of the disease. The clinical immunohistochemical and molecular studies in both patients are
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Amyloidosis is characterised by the extracellular deposition of certain different proteins in a distinctively abnormal fibrillar conformation. All types of amyloid fibril share remarkably similar structural and biophysical properties despite substantial chemical heterogeneity among their respective
Familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy is an inherited form of amyloidosis associated with a mutant form of a protein called transthyretin. The Methionine-30 variant is the most frequent mutation observed. This disorder is caused by deposition of this protein as amyloid in several organs, such as the h