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1.
Gaucher disease is the most common lysosomal storage disease with a high prevalence in the Ashkenazi Jewish population but it is also present in other populations. The presence of eight mutations (1226G, 1448C, IVS2+1, 84GG, 1504T, 1604T, 1342C and 1297T) and the complete deletion of the β-glucocerebrosidase gene was investigated in 25 unrelated non-Jewish patients with Gaucher’s disease in Germany. In the Jewish population, three of these mutations account for more than 90% of all mutated alleles. In addition, relatives of two patients were included in our study. Restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis and sequencing of PCR products obtained from DNA of peripheral blood leukocytes was performed for mutation analysis. Gene deletion was detected by comparison of radioactively labelled PCR fragments of both the functional β-glucocerebrosidase gene and the pseudogene. Among the unrelated patients, 50 alleles were investigated and the mutations identified in 35 alleles (70%), whereas 15 alleles (30%) remained unidentified. The most prevalent mutation in our group of patients was the 1226G (370Asn→Ser) mutation, accounting for 18 alleles (36%), followed by the 1448C (444Leu→Pro) mutation, that was found in 12 alleles (24%). A complete gene deletion was present in two alleles (4%). The IVS1+2 (splicing mutation), the 1504T (463Arg→Cys) as well as the 1342C (409Asp→His) mutations were each present in one allele (2%). None of the alleles carried the 84GG (frameshift), 1604A (496Arg→His) or the 1297T (394Val→Leu) mutation. This distribution is different from the Ashkenazi Jewish population but is similar to other Caucasian groups like the Spanish and Portuguese populations. Our results confirm the variability of mutation patterns in Gaucher patients of different ethnic origin. All patients were divided into nine groups according to their genotype and their clinical status was related to the individual genotype. Genotype/phenotype characteristics of the 1226G, 1448C, and 1342C mutations of previous studies were confirmed by our results. Received: 19 November 1996 / Revised: 29 January 1997  相似文献   

2.
The frequency of nine different mutated alleles known to occur in the glucocerebrosidase gene was determined in 247 Gaucher patients, of whom 176 were of Jewish extraction, 2 were Jewish with one converted parent, and 69 were of non-Jewish origin. DNA was prepared from peripheral blood, active glucocerebrosidase sequences were amplified by using the PCR technique, and the mutations were identified by using the allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization method. The N37OS mutation appeared in 69.77% of the mutated alleles in Jewish patients and in 22.86% of the mutated alleles in non-Jews. The 84GG mutation, which has not been found so far among non-Jewish patients, existed in 10.17% of the disease alleles among Jewish patients. The IVS + 1 mutation constituted 2.26% of the disease alleles among Jewish patients and 1.43% among the non-Jewish patients. RecTL, a complex allele containing four single-base-pair changes, occurred in 2.26% of the alleles in Jewish patients and was found in two (1.43%) of the patients of non-Jewish extraction. Another complex allele, designated "RecNciI" and containing three single-point mutations, appeared in 7.8% of alleles of non-Jewish patients and in only two (0.56%) of the Jewish families. The prevalence of the L444P mutation among non-Jewish Gaucher patients was 31.43%, while its prevalence among Jewish patients was only 4.24%. The prevalence of two other point mutations--D409H and R463C--was 5.00% and 3.57%, respectively, among non-Jewish patients and was not found among the Jewish Gaucher patient population. The prevalence of the R496H mutation, found so far only among Jewish patients, was 1.13%. The results presented demonstrate that seven mutations identify 90.40% of the mutations among Jewish patients and that these seven mutations allow diagnosis of only 73.52% of the non-Jewish patients. Identification of additional mutant alleles will enhance the accuracy of carrier detection.  相似文献   

3.
Gaucher disease results from the inherited deficiency of the enzyme glucocerebrosidase (EC 3.2.1.45). Although >100 mutations in the gene for human glucocerebrosidase have been described, most genotype-phenotype studies have focused upon screening for a few common mutations. In this study, we used several approaches-including direct sequencing, Southern blotting, long-template PCR, restriction digestions, and the amplification refraction mutation system (ARMS)-to genotype 128 patients with type 1 Gaucher disease (64 of Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry and 64 of non-Jewish extraction) and 24 patients with type 3 Gaucher disease. More than 97% of the mutant alleles were identified. Fourteen novel mutations (A90T, N117D, T134I, Y135X, R170C, W184R, A190T, Y304X, A341T, D399Y, c.153-154insTACAGC, c.203-204insC, c.222-224delTAC, and c.1122-1123insTG) and many rare mutations were detected. Recombinant alleles were found in 19% of the patients. Although 93% of the mutant alleles in our Ashkenazi Jewish type 1 patients were N370S, c.84-85insG, IVS2+1G-->A or L444P, these four mutations accounted for only 49% of mutant alleles in the non-Jewish type 1 patients. Genotype-phenotype correlations were attempted. Homozygosity or heterozygosity for N370S resulted in type 1 Gaucher disease, whereas homozygosity for L444P was associated with type 3. Genotype L444P/recombinant allele resulted in type 2 Gaucher disease, and homozygosity for a recombinant allele was associated with perinatal lethal disease. The phenotypic consequences of other mutations, particularly R463C, were more inconsistent. Our results demonstrate a high rate of mutation detection, a large number of novel and rare mutations, and an accurate assessment of the prevalence of recombinant alleles. Although some genotype-phenotype correlations do exist, other genetic and environmental factors must also contribute to the phenotypes encountered, and we caution against relying solely upon genotype for prognostic or therapeutic judgements.  相似文献   

4.
Reliable estimates of the frequency of Gaucher disease-producing mutations are not available. The high frequency of Gaucher disease in the Ashkenazi Jewish population is due to the occurrence of a mutation at nucleotide (nt) 1226. We have screened 593 DNA samples from normal Ashkenazi Jews, as well as 62 DNA samples from all our Ashkenazi Jewish patients with Gaucher disease, for the presence of the 1226 mutation. In the 593 presumed normal Ashkenazi Jewish individuals the 1226 mutation was identified in the heterozygous state in 37 and in the homozygous state in two, giving a gene frequency of .035 for the mutation. This 1226 mutation represented 73% of the 124 Gaucher disease alleles in Jewish Gaucher disease patients. Accordingly we estimate that the gene frequency for Gaucher disease among the Ashkenazi Jewish population is .047, which is equivalent to a carrier frequency of 8.9% and a birth incidence of 1:450.  相似文献   

5.
Gaucher disease: gene frequencies in the Ashkenazi Jewish population.   总被引:7,自引:1,他引:6  
DNA from over 2,000 Ashkenazi Jewish subjects has been examined for the four most common Jewish Gaucher disease mutations, which collectively account for about 96% of the disease-producing alleles in Jewish patients. This population survey has made possible the estimation of gene frequencies for these alleles. Eighty-seven of 1,528 individuals were heterozygous for the 1226G (N370S) mutation, and four presumably well persons were homozygous for this mutation. The gene frequency for the 1226G allele was calculated to be .0311, and when these data were pooled with those obtained previously from another 593 Jewish subjects, a gene frequency of .032 with a standard error of .004 was found. Among 2,305 normal subjects, 10 were found to be heterozygous for the 84GG allele, giving a gene frequency of .00217 with a standard error of .00096. No examples of the IVS2(+1) mutation were found among 1,256 samples screened, and no 1448C (L444P) mutations were found among 1,528 samples examined. Examination of the distribution of Gaucher disease gene frequencies in the general population shows that the ratio of 1226G mutations to 84GG mutations is higher than that in the patient population. This is presumed to be due to the fact that homozygotes for the 1226G mutation often have late-onset disease or no significant clinical manifestations at all. To bring the gene frequency in the patient population into conformity with the gene frequency in the general population, nearly two-thirds of persons with a Gaucher disease genotype would be missing from the patient population, presumably because their clinical manifestations were very mild.  相似文献   

6.
The characterization of mutations in Japanese patients with lipidosis, particularly in metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD) and Gaucher disease has been studied in detail. Metachromatic leukodystrophy is characterized by an accumulation of sulfatide in nervous tissues and kidney due to a deficiency of arylsulfatase A (ASA). We analyzed the presence of three known mutant arylsulfatase A alleles in Japanese patients with MLD. Among 10 patients of Japanese patients with MLD, we found that allele 445A mutation has moderately high incidence and also homozygosity of this mutation results in the late infantile form. Allele 2381T was not found in Japanese patients. Furthermore, we found novel mutation which is G- to A mutation at the 1070 nucleotide of the ASA gene (designated 1070 A) in Japanese patients with juvenile onset. This mutation results in a amino acid substitution of Gly245 by Arg and found in heterozygote form. Our studies of molecular analysis in 10 Japanese patients with MLD indicate that Japanese MLD patients have unique characteristics of ASA mutations compared with those of Caucasian patients. On the other hand, Gaucher disease is the most prevalent sphingolipidosis, characterized by an accumulation of glucocerebroside in macrophage derived cells due to a deficiency of lysosomal hydrolase glucocerebrosidase. To study the molecular basis of Gaucher disease in Japanese patients, we analyzed the presence of the two known mutations (6433C and 3548A) in the glucocerebrosidase gene of 15 patients with Gaucher disease. We found that the 6433C and 3548A mutations occur in all subtypes of Japanese patients with Gaucher disease. Most frequent mutations among them was the 6433C mutation, 40% of 30 chromosomes, whereas the novel mutation of the 3548A found in Japanese patients with neuronopathic Gaucher disease was found in 20% (6 out of 30 chromosomes). The characteristics of these mutations in Japanese patients with Gaucher disease is different from those of Caucasian populations reported previously.  相似文献   

7.
We have identified a new T-to-A single-base substitution at nucleotide 3548 (in the genomic sequence) in exon 6 in the glucocerebrosidase gene from a patient with Gaucher disease type 3. This mutation caused a substitution of isoleucine for phenylalanine at amino acid residue 213 (of 497 residues in the mature protein). By in vitro expression study in cultured mammalian cells, this mutation resulted in deficient activity of glucocerebrosidase. By allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization of selectively PCR-amplified DNA from eight unrelated Japanese Gaucher disease patients, this mutant allele was observed in other neuronopathic Japanese Gaucher disease patients, in moderately frequent occurrence (three of six neuronopathic patients). This observation suggests that this allele was one of severe [corrected] alleles which were related to the development of neurological manifestations of Gaucher disease.  相似文献   

8.
Gaucher disease is the most frequent lysosomal storage disease and the most prevalent Jewish genetic disease. About 30 identified missense mutations are causal to the defective activity of acid beta-glucosidase in this disease. cDNAs were characterized from a moderately affected 9-year-old Ashkenazi Jewish Gaucher disease type 1 patient whose 80-year-old, enzyme-deficient, 1226G (Asn370----Ser [N370S]) homozygous grandfather was nearly asymptomatic. Sequence analyses revealed four populations of cDNAs with either the 1226G mutation, an exact exon 2 (delta EX2) deletion, a deletion of exon 2 and the first 115 bp of exon 3 (delta EX2-3), or a completely normal sequence. About 50% of the cDNAs were the delta EX2, the delta EX2-3, and the normal cDNAs, in a ratio of 6:3:1. Specific amplification and characterization of exon 2 and 5' and 3' intronic flanking sequences from the structural gene demonstrated clones with either the normal sequence or with a G+1----A+1 transition at the exon 2/intron 2 boundary. This mutation destroyed the splice donor consensus site (U1 binding site) for mRNA processing. This transition also was present at the corresponding exon/intron boundary of the highly homologous pseudogene. This new mutation, termed "IVS2 G+1----A+1," is the first splicing mutation described in Gaucher disease and accounted for about 3.4% of the Gaucher disease alleles in the Ashkenazi Jewish population. The occurrence of this "pseudogene"-type mutation in the structural gene indicates the role of acid beta-glucosidase pseudogene and structural gene rearrangements in the pathogenesis of this disease.  相似文献   

9.
Mutation screening of 17 Japanese patients with neuropathic Gaucher disease   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Using PCR and PCR-single strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) we have identified gene mutations in 17 Japanese patients with neuropathic Gaucher disease (type 2, 9 cases; type 3, 8 cases). The L444P, F213I, D409H, and 1447 del 20 and 1447 ins TG mutations accounted for eight (type 2, 6; type 3, 2), seven (type 2, 2; type 3, 5), three (type 3), and three (type 2) alleles, respectively. Three alleles were unique. Ten alleles (type 2, 5; type 3, 5) could not be identified. The genotypes, D409H/?, L444P/?, L444P/F213I, and F213I/?, were identified in three, three, two, and two patients, respectively. Six patients had a unique genotype and none of the mutant alleles could be identified in one patient. The data indicate that the genotypes in Japanese patients with neuropathic Gaucher disease are found to be heterogeneous and the genotype prevalence and mutated alleles are unique.  相似文献   

10.
Gaucher disease (GD) is the most prevalent lysosomal storage disease. This autosomal recessive trait results from the defective activity of acid beta-glucosidase (beta-Glc). Four different exonic point mutations have been identified as causal alleles for GD. To facilitate screening for these alleles, assays were developed using allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization to amplified genomic DNA sequences. Specifically, intron bases flanking exons 5, 9, and 10 were determined, and conditions for PCR amplification of these exons were obtained. Two different procedures were developed to distinguish signals obtained from the structural beta-Glc gene exons and those from the pseudogene. These procedures were used to determine the distribution of all known GD alleles in a population of 44 affected patients of varying phenotypes and ethnicity. The high frequency of one of the exon 9 mutations in Ashkenazi Jewish GD type 1 patients was confirmed, and, in addition, this mutation was present in ethnically diverse non-Jewish type 1 GD patients. Homozygotes (N = 5) for this allele were midly affected older individuals, and this mutant allele was not found in any patient with neuronopathic disease. The exon 10 mutation was confirmed as the predominant allele in types 2 and 3 GD. However, several type 1 GD patients, including one of Ashkenazi-Jewish heritage, also were heterozygous for this allele. The presence of this allele in type 1 patients did not correlate with the severity of clinical symptoms. The second exon 9 mutation and the exon 5 mutation were rare, since they occurred only heterozygously either in one type 2 GD patient or in two related Ashkenazi-Jewish GD patients, respectively. Although most GD patients (38 of 44) had at least one of the known mutant alleles, 57% were heterozygotes for only one of these mutations. Fourteen percent of patients were negative for all mutations. A total of 73% of GD patients had at least one unknown allele. The varying clinical phenotypes and ethnic origins of these incompletely characterized patients suggest that multiple other GD alleles exist.  相似文献   

11.
In patients originally genotyped as homoallelic for the Gaucher disease (GD) L444P (1448C) mutation, we sought to confirm previously reported phenotypic differences between Caucasians and Japanese, to determine the prevalence and phenotypic impact of recombinant alleles, and to explore the phenotypic influence of genetic background. We therefore analyzed data from longer-term clinical follow-up, more comprehensive genotyping and polymorphism and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) testing in all known Japanese L444P homozygotes (n=15). Our studies demonstrated that, of 12 patients in our series originally diagnosed with non-neuronopathic GD, 9 developed neurological signs/symptoms during follow-up (at a mean of 14 years 11 months±11 years 4 months). Of three patients originally diagnosed with acute neuronopathic (type 2) GD, all three were compound heterozygotes for L444P and the complex allele RecNci I. In the entire series, Pvu II and liver erythrocyte pyruvate kinase (PKLR) polymorphism and prevalence of the 9 bp mtDNA deletion were heterogeneous, and these background genetic factors could not predict phenotypic expression. Our data suggest that, in Japanese as in Caucasian patients, the L444P/L444P genotype is highly associated with subacute neuronopathic (type 3) GD, and the presence of a complex allele together with an L444P allele leads to type 2 disease. Our findings also underline the importance of comprehensive genotyping (particularly testing for recombinant alleles), long-term follow-up and careful neurological examination in patients with early-onset GD. Such measures ultimately may improve genotype/phenotype correlations and, with them, genetic counseling and therapeutic decision making. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

12.
Complex alleles of the acid beta-glucosidase gene in Gaucher disease.   总被引:12,自引:5,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
Gaucher disease is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner and is the most prevalent lysosomal storage disease. Gaucher disease has marked phenotypic variation and molecular heterogeneity, and seven point mutations in the acid beta-glucosidase (beta-Glc) gene have been identified. By means of sequence-specific oligonucleotides (SSO), mutation 6433C has been detected homozygously in neuronopathic type 2 (acute) and type 3 (subacute) patients, as well as in children with severe visceral involvement who are apparently free of neuronopathic disease. To investigate the molecular basis for this puzzling finding, amplified beta-Glc cDNAs from 6433C homozygous type 2 and type 3 Gaucher disease patients were cloned and sequenced. The Swedish type 3 Gaucher disease patient was truly homozygous for alleles only containing the 6433C mutation. In comparison, the type 2 patient contained a singly mutated 6433C allele and a "complex" allele with multiple discrete point mutations (6433C, 6468C, and 6482C). Each of the mutations in the complex allele also was present in the beta-Glc pseudogene. SSO hybridization of 6433C homozygotes revealed that both type 2 patients contained additional mutations in one allele, whereas the 6433C alone was detected in both type 3 and in young severe type 1 Gaucher disease patients. These results suggest that the presence of the complex allele influences the severity of neuronopathic disease in 6433C homozygotes and reveal the central role played by the pseudogene in the formation of mutant alleles of the beta-Glc gene. Analysis of additional cDNA clones also identified two new alleles in a type 3 patient, emphasizing the molecular heterogeneity of neuronopathic Gaucher disease.  相似文献   

13.
Gaucher disease is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner and is the most prevalent lysosomal storage disease. Gaucher disease has marked phenotypic variation and molecular heterogeneity, and several simple and complex alleles of the acid beta-glucosidase gene have been identified as causal to this disease. Certain combinations of alleles have been shown to correlate well with the severity of the disease, but many Gaucher disease patients exist whose disease is not explained by any of the published mutations. This study was undertaken to identify mutant alleles in such incompletely characterized Gaucher disease, in an attempt to find further correlations between clinical phenotype and the presence of acid beta-glucosidase alleles. RNA was isolated from Gaucher cell lines and converted to cDNA, the cDNA was amplified by PCR and cloned, and several clones for each allele were sequenced. Several new singly mutated and multiply mutated alleles were identified, and sequence-specific oligonucleotide hybridization was used to verify the presence of these mutations in the genome of these patients. All newly identified mutations occurred only rarely in the Gaucher disease population, making it difficult to determine whether inheritance of a particular combination of alleles always correlates with the clinical manifestations seen in the test patients. Three of the newly described alleles were single missense mutations in exon 8, one was a single missense mutation in exon 5, and the fifth was a complex allele, comprising a series of different point mutations scattered throughout exons 5 and 6.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The molecular diagnostics of 27 from 26 Ukrainian families has been performed. The common mutations in GBA gene (N370S, L444P and 84GG) accounted for up to 58% of all cases: mutation N370S was detected in 42.3% alleles, mutation L444P was observed in 15.4% alleles and mutation 84GG was not found at all. The other mutations were: P178S, W184R and Rec Nci I (in compounds with N370S) in the patients with nonneuronopathic form of Gaucher disease, and the genotypes G377S/c 999G --> A and D409H/R120W/G202R were detected in patients with chronic neuronopathic form of Gaucher disease. The data analysis of the genotype and disease progression in the patients allows confirming the known genotype-phenotype correlation.  相似文献   

15.
We have localized the PvuII polymorphism of the glucocerebrosidase gene complex to intron 6 of the active gene. Using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to amplify intron 6 of DNA samples from Pv1.1-/Pv1.1+ individuals, we defined the mutation causing this polymorphism as a G----A single-base substitution at position 3931 of the active gene. By analyzing 54 unrelated Gaucher patients we show strong linkage disequilibrium between the Pv1.1- genotype and the common Jewish mutation 1226 causing the adult type of this disease. Gaucher disease patients heterozygous for the 1226 allele and one unidentified allele (1226/?), particularly those of Jewish ancestry, were predominantly of the Pv1.1-/PV1.1+ genotype. This suggests that one of the unknown alleles may be relatively common and linked to the Pv1.1+ genotype.  相似文献   

16.
Biosynthesis and maturation of glucocerebrosidase in Gaucher fibroblasts   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The biosynthesis and maturation of glucocerebrosidase were studied in fibroblasts from patients with the neurological and non-neurological forms of Gaucher disease and in control cells. In control fibroblasts the precursor of glucocerebrosidase (62-63 kDa), observed after a short pulse with [35S]methionine, was converted during the chase period to a 66-kDa intermediate form and, finally, to the 59-kDa mature protein. In fibroblasts from patients with the non-neurological phenotype of Gaucher disease (type 1) the same biosynthetic forms were seen as in control fibroblasts. These biosynthetic forms correspond to the three-banded pattern seen in control and Gaucher type 1 fibroblast extracts analysed by the immunoblotting procedure, or after electrophoresis and fluorography of extracts of such fibroblasts cultured for 5 days with [14C]leucine. The 59-kDa protein seen in type 1 fibroblasts was unstable and disappeared after a prolonged chase; this disappearance was not observed when the cells were grown in the presence of leupeptin. In fibroblasts from patients with the neurological forms of Gaucher disease (types 2 and 3) the 62.5-kDa precursor of glucocerebrosidase was present in near-normal amounts after a short pulse, but the 59-kDa form was not detected even when cells were cultured with leupeptin. These results are in accordance with the absence of the 59-kDa band in immunoblots of types 2 and 3 fibroblast extracts. Culturing of type 1, type 2 and type 3 Gaucher fibroblasts in the presence of leupeptin led to an increase in the activity of glucocerebrosidase.  相似文献   

17.
Genomic DNA prepared from human cells in culture was amplified by the polymerase chain-reaction technique using two primers specific for the active human glucocerebrosidase gene. The 1,036-bp amplified fragment derived from the active gene was tested for the existence of three mutations--designated "370," "NciI," and "HhaI"--by allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization. The results obtained from the cell lines examined permitted a clear distinction between homozygous affected, heterozygous, and normal genotypes. However, 28% of the possible affected loci were normal with respect to the three mutations, indicating the presence of additional mutations that remain to be elucidated. While the NciI mutation could be found in both Ashkenazi Jewish and non-Jewish type 1 patients, the only homozygotes with this mutation had the neurological (type 2 or type 3) form of the disease. The 370 mutation, on the other hand, was only present in type 1 patients and was not identified among any of the patients with neurologic forms of the disease.  相似文献   

18.
Summary A 444leucine to proline mutation detected by a NciI polymorphism in the human glucocerebrosidase gene was studied to investigate the correlation of the three clinical phenotypes of Gaucher disease with this mutation in 11 Japanese patients with Gaucher disease (type I, 8 patients; type II, 1 patient; type III, 2 patients) and to determine the feasibility of the use of genomic probe DNA for carrier detection and prenatal diagnosis in 8 Japanese families with Gaucher disease and agreeable to family study (type I, 6 families; type III, 2 families). The homoallelic 444leucine to proline mutation was found only in patients with type I disease. Of the 8 type I patients, 5 had the homoallelic mutation and 2 had one mutant allele. One patient with type II disease did not have this mutant allele. Of the 2 type III patients, one had a single mutant allele whereas the other exhibited no mutation of this kind. These results suggest that the 444leucine to proline mutation is very common in the type I (non-neuronopathic form) disease and is not tightly associated only with neuronopathic types of Gaucher disease in Japanese patients. These findings seem to conflict with others showing that this mutation is partially responsible for the occurrence of neuronopathic Gaucher disease. Thus, the NciI polymorphism will not be useful for the diagnosis of subtypes of Gaucher disease. Carrier detection was feasible in three families with type I disease of the 8 families analyzed by the NciI polymorphism.  相似文献   

19.
Gaucher disease results from an autosomal recessive deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme glucocerebrosidase. The glucocerebrosidase gene is located in a gene-rich region of 1q21 that contains six genes and two pseudogenes within 75 kb. The presence of contiguous, highly homologous pseudogenes for both glucocerebrosidase and metaxin at the locus increases the likelihood of DNA rearrangements in this region. These recombinations can complicate genotyping in patients with Gaucher disease and contribute to the difficulty in interpreting genotype-phenotype correlations in this disorder. In the present study, DNA samples from 240 patients with Gaucher disease were examined using several complementary approaches to identify and characterize recombinant alleles, including direct sequencing, long-template polymerase chain reaction, polymorphic microsatellite repeats, and Southern blots. Among the 480 alleles studied, 59 recombinant alleles were identified, including 34 gene conversions, 18 fusions, and 7 downstream duplications. Twenty-two percent of the patients evaluated had at least one recombinant allele. Twenty-six recombinant alleles were found among 310 alleles from patients with type 1 disease, 18 among 74 alleles from patients with type 2 disease, and 15 among 96 alleles from patients with type 3 disease. Several patients carried two recombinations or mutations on the same allele. Generally, alleles resulting from nonreciprocal recombination (gene conversion) could be distinguished from those arising by reciprocal recombination (crossover and exchange), and the length of the converted sequence was determined. Homozygosity for a recombinant allele was associated with early lethality. Ten different sites of crossover and a shared pentamer motif sequence (CACCA) that could be a hotspot for recombination were identified. These findings contribute to a better understanding of genotype-phenotype relationships in Gaucher disease and may provide insights into the mechanisms of DNA rearrangement in other disorders.  相似文献   

20.
We have collected demographic and/or mutation information on a worldwide sample of 394 patients with type B Niemann-Pick disease (NPD). The disorder is panethnic, with the highest incidence occurring in individuals of Turkish, Arabic, and North African descent. Only five of the 394 patients were Ashkenazi Jewish, revealing that, unlike the type A form of NPD, type B NPD does not occur frequently within this population. Mutation analysis of the acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) gene (designated "SMPD1") was performed on 228 patients (324 unique alleles), and several novel, "common" mutations were found. Among these were the L137P, fsP189, and L549P mutations, which accounted for approximately 75% of the alleles in Turkish patients, the H421Y and K576N mutations, which accounted for approximately 85% of the alleles in Saudi Arabian patients, the S379P, R441X, R474W, and F480L mutations, which accounted for approximately 55% of the alleles in Portuguese/Brazilian patients, and the A196P mutation, which accounted for approximately 42% of the alleles in Scottish/English patients. The previously reported DeltaR608 mutation occurred on approximately 12% of the alleles studied. Overall, a total of 45 novel mutations were found, and several new genotype/phenotype correlations were identified. In particular, the L137P, A196P, and R474W mutations were consistent with a less severe form of type B NPD, whereas the H421Y and K576N mutations led to an early-onset, more severe form that was specific to Saudi Arabia. These data provide the first extensive demographic assessment of this disorder and describe several new mutations that can be used to predict phenotypic outcome and to gain new insights into the structure and function of ASM.  相似文献   

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