Deletions of variable size involving one or more exons, 29 different missense, nonsense, or frameshift mutations, and three polymorphisms have been found in patients with ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency. Most of the deletions and mutations were found in patients with severe disease manif
Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency: Characterization of gene mutations and polymorphisms
โ Scribed by Elisabeth Oppliger Leibundgut; Bendicht Wermuth; Jean-Pierre Colombo; Sabina Liechti-Gallati
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 931 KB
- Volume
- 8
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1059-7794
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โฆ Synopsis
Communicated by Robert L. Nussbaum
We identified three new and three known mutations in male patients with OTC deficiency using PCR amplification of all the individual exons, including the adjacent intron sequences, followed by direct sequencing of the amplimers. Two mutations were found in males presenting with neonatal fatal hyperammonemia and no detectable enzyme activity in their livers. The H302Y mutation found in one patient affects the putative binding site for ornithine. The second patient had an R141X mutation, which is one of the few recurrent mutations in the OTC gene. Four different missense mutations were identified in male patients with late onset of the disease and residual OTC activities between 14% and 35%. The mutations are Y176C and P220A and the known mutations K88N and T343K, respectively. Four of the patients' mothers were identified as carriers. In two cases, the mutations had occurred spontaneously. In addition, the frequency of four polymorphisms of the OTC gene was studied. The K46R polymorphism in exon 2 and the Q270R polymorphism in exon 8 were found in 36% and 4% of screened alleles, respectively. Two questionable polymorphisms in exon 4, FlOlL and L111P, were not present in any of the screened alleles.
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