## Communicated by Jurgen Horst Wilson disease (WND), an autosomal recessive disorder of copper transport, is characterized by excessive accumulation of intracellular copper in liver and extrahepatic tissues because of impaired biliary copper excretion and disturbed incorporation of copper into ce
Wilson disease: Novel mutations in the ATP7B gene and clinical correlation in Brazilian patients
β Scribed by Marta M. Deguti; Janine Genschel; Eduardo L.R. Cancado; Egberto R. Barbosa; Bettina Bochow; Marcos Mucenic; Gilda Porta; Herbert Lochs; Flair J. Carrilho; Hartmut H.-J. Schmidt
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 225 KB
- Volume
- 23
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1059-7794
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β¦ Synopsis
Wilson disease (WD) is a rare inherited autosomal recessive disorder caused by a defect in a metal transporting P-type ATPase, resulting in copper overload in various tissues and cells. The aim was to assess both the phenotype in Brazilian WD patients and the corresponding ATP7B genotype. Sixty subjects belonging to 46 pedigrees diagnosed as WD were included in this study. Direct sequencing of all 21 exons within ATP7B and their flanking introns was performed. Demographic, clinical, laboratory and histopathological data at the time of diagnosis were obtained. We identified twenty-five mutations, twelve of them reported for the first time. The c.3402delC mutation had the highest allelic frequency (30.8%), followed by the c.2123T>C (p.L708P) (16.7%). Exons 8 and 15 were the site of 62.5% of the mutations. The common European mutation c.3207C>A (p.H1069Q) was not present at all. Phenotype varied greatly among individuals with the same ATP7B genotype. Our data confirm the heterogeneity of ATP7B genotype in Brazilian WD patients. The mutational spectrum is compatible with the Brazilian history of Mediterranean immigration; however, new mutations, and different frequencies and phenotype associated with the previously known mutations characterize this population. Exons 8 and 15 should be preferentially screened in WD cases from Brazil. Phenotype variation among subjects with the same ATP7B genotype suggests that modifying factors play an additional role in the pathogenesis of WD.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
We characterized microsatellite marker haplotypes and identified mutations in members of 19 ethnically diverse Israeli families affected by Wilson disease (WD). Eighteen unique haplotypes were derived from allelic combinations for four marker loci spanning the WD gene, ATP7B, at chromosome 13q14.3:
The gene ATP7B responsible for Wilson's disease (WD) produces a protein which is predicted to be a copper-binding P-type ATPase, homologous to the Menkes disease gene (ATP7A). Various mutations of ATP7B have been identified. This study aimed to detect disease-causing mutations, to clarify their freq