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1.
The presence of nine mutations in the phenylalanine hydroxlase (PAH) gene, previously described in phenylketonuria (PKU) patients of other Mediterranean and European populations, was assessed in 47 Greek PKU and 3 hyperphenylalaninaemia (HPA) patients. Of the nine mutations investigated, only five were detected, characterizing 31 % of the PKU alleles in our patients.  相似文献   

2.
It is well established that the involvement of reactive species in the pathophysiology of several neurological diseases, including phenylketonuria (PKU), a metabolic genetic disorder biochemically characterized by elevated levels of phenylalanine (Phe). In previous studies, we verified that PKU patients (treated with a protein-restricted diet supplemented with a special formula not containing L-carnitine and selenium) presented high lipid and protein oxidative damage as well as a reduction of antioxidants when compared to the healthy individuals. Our goal in the present study was to evaluate the effect of Phe-restricted diet supplemented with L-carnitine and selenium, two well-known antioxidant compounds, on oxidative damage in PKU patients. We investigated various oxidative stress parameters in blood of 18 treated PKU patients before and after 6 months of supplementation with a special formula containing L-carnitine and selenium. It was verified that treatment with L-carnitine and selenium was capable of reverting the lipid peroxidation, measured by thiobarbituric acid-reactive species, and the protein oxidative damage, measured by sulfhydryl oxidation, to the levels of controls. Additionally, the reduced activity of glutathione peroxidase was normalized by the antioxidant supplementation. It was also verified a significant inverse correlation between lipid peroxidation and L-carnitine blood levels as well as a significant positive correlation between glutathione peroxidase activity and blood selenium concentration. In conclusion, our results suggest that supplementation of L-carnitine and selenium is important for PKU patients since it could help to correct the oxidative stress process which possibly contributes, at least in part, to the neurological symptoms found in phenylketonuric patients.  相似文献   

3.
Hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA) results from defective hydroxylation of phenylalanine in the liver, in most cases because of defective phenylalanine hydroxylase. HPA is highly variable, ranging from moderate elevation of plasma phenylalanine with no clinical consequences to a severe disease, classical phenylketonuria (PKU). Non-PKU HPA was found in excess of PKU in Israel, while the opposite is true in Europe. To study the genetic basis of non-PKU HPA, we performed haplotype analysis at the phenylalanine hydroxylase locus in 27 families with non-PKU HPA. All individuals with this condition were compound heterozygotes. In six of these families, in which both PKU and non-PKU HPA were segregating, haplotype analysis showed that non-PKU HPA resulted from compound heterozygosity for a PKU mutation and a second mutation, with milder effect, which is probably expressed only when it interacts with the severe mutation. The involvement of PKU mutations in non-PKU HPA was further demonstrated in Jewish Yemenite families with non-PKU HPA, in which the individuals with this condition were carriers of the single PKU allele which exists in this community. In addition, two previously known PKU point mutations (R261Q and R408W) were found in individuals with non-PKU HPA. These mutations are associated, in our population, with the same haplotypes as those with which it is associated in Europe. Based on the above-mentioned genetic model for non-PKU HPA, successful prenatal diagnosis of this condition was performed in one family.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.

BACKGROUND:

Defects either in phenylalanine hydroxylase (PheOH) or in the production and recycling of its cofactor (tetrahydrobiopterin [BH4]) are the causes of primary hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA). The aim of our study was to investigate the current status of different variants of HPA Kurdish patients in Kermanshah province, Iran.

MATERIALS AND METHODS:

From 33 cases enrolled in our study, 32 were identified as HPA patients. Reassessing of pre-treatment phenylalanine concentrations and the analysis of urinary pterins was done by high-performance liquid chromatography method.

RESULTS:

A total of 30 patients showed PAH deficiency and two patients were diagnosed with BH4 deficiency (BH4/HPA ratio = 6.25%). Both of these two BH4-deficient patients were assigned to severe variant of dihydropteridine reductase (DHPR) deficiency. More than 75% of patients with PAH deficiency classified as classic phenylketonuria (PKU) according their levels of pre-treatment phenylalanine concentrations.

CONCLUSION:

Based on the performed study, we think that the frequency of milder forms of PKU is higher than those was estimated before and/or our findings here. Furthermore, the frequency of DHPR deficiency seems to be relatively high in our province. Since the clinical symptoms of DHPR deficiency are confusingly similar to that of classic PKU and its prognosis are much worse than classical PKU and cannot be solely treated with the PKU regime, our pilot study support that it is crucial to set up screening for BH4 deficiency, along with PAH deficiency, among all HPA patients diagnosed with HPA.  相似文献   

5.
DNA haplotype analyses of patients with hyperphenylalaninemia.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Linkage analysis of phenylketonurics has shown a strong association between the DNA haplotype at the phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) locus and phenylketonuria (PKU). Similarly, a genetic linkage between less severe forms of hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA) and the PAH locus has been suggested. In the present study we analyzed this linkage in more detail. Haplotypes at the PAH locus were determined for 19 individuals with moderately elevated plasma phenylalanine and normal urinary neopterin/biopterin ratios. Fourteen of these individuals had plasma phenylalanine levels of 4-10 mg/dl (mild HPA), and the other five had plasma phenylalanine levels of 10-19 mg/dl (atypical PKU). Thirteen of the 15 HPA families consisted of an affected child and at least one other sibling. Elevated plasma phenylalanine was seen to genetically segregate with specific PAH alleles in each family. Summation of the LOD scores for both categories of moderate plasma phenylalanine elevation gave a maximum value of 3.556 at theta = 0. At theta = 0 this gives a probability of linkage between the PAH locus and the locus for moderate phenylalanine elevations that is approximately 3,600:1. None of the alleles segregating with either mild HPA or atypical PKU were of haplotype 2 or 3, and 13/20 were of types 1 or 4. This is in agreement with the most deleterious mutations being on haplotypes 2 and 3 and with the less severe mutations being on haplotypes 1 and 4. chi 2 Analyses indicated no statistically significant correlation between HPA and a particular haplotype or restriction-enzyme site.  相似文献   

6.
Hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA) refers to all clinical conditions characterized by increased amounts of phenylalanine (PHE) in blood and other tissues. According to their blood PHE concentrations under a free diet, hyperphenylalaninemic patients are commonly classified into phenotypic subtypes: classical phenylketonuria (PKU) (PHE > 1200 µM/L), mild PKU (PHE 600-1200 µM/L) and persistent HPA (PHE 120-600 µM/L) (normal blood PHE < 120 µM/L). The current treatment for hyperphenylalaninemic patients is aimed to keep blood PHE levels within the safe range of 120-360 µM/L through a PHE-restricted diet, difficult to achieve. If untreated, classical PKU presents variable neurological and mental impairment. However, even mildly elevated blood PHE levels, due to a bad compliance to dietary treatment, produce cognitive deficits involving the prefrontal cortical areas, extremely sensible to PHE-induced disturbances. The development of animal models of different degrees of HPA is a useful tool for identifying the metabolic mechanisms underlying cognitive deficits induced by PHE. In this paper we analyzed the behavioral and biochemical phenotypes of different forms of HPA (control, mild-HPA, mild-PKU and classic-PKU), developed on the base of plasma PHE concentrations. Our results demonstrated that mice with different forms of HPA present different phenotypes, characterized by increasing severity of behavioral symptoms and brain aminergic deficits moving from mild HPA to classical PKU forms. In addition, our data identify preFrontal cortex and amygdala as the most affected brain areas and confirm the highest susceptibility of brain serotonin metabolism to mildly elevated blood PHE.  相似文献   

7.
We analyzed correlations between mutant genotypes at the human phenylalanine hydroxylase locus (gene symbol PAH) and the corresponding hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA) phenotypes (notably, phenylketonuria [OMIM 261600]). We used reports, both published and in the PAH Mutation Analysis Consortium Database, on 365 patients harboring 73 different PAH mutations in 161 different genotypes. HPA phenotypes were classified as phenylketonuria (PKU), variant PKU, and non-PKU HPA. By analysis both of homoallelic mutant genotypes and of "functionally hemizygous" heteroallelic genotypes, we characterized the phenotypic effect of 48 of the 73 different, largely missense mutations. Among those with consistent in vivo expression, 24 caused PKU, 3 caused variant PKU, and 10 caused non-PKU HPA. However, 11 mutations were inconsistent in their effect: 9 appeared in two different phenotype classes, and 2 (I65T and Y414C) appeared in all three classes. Seven mutations were inconsistent in phenotypic effect when in vitro (unit-protein) expression was compared with the corresponding in vivo phenotype (an emergent property). We conclude that the majority of PAH mutations confer a consistent phenotype and that this is concordant with their effects, when known, predicted from in vitro expression analysis. However, significant inconsistencies, both between in vitro and in vivo phenotypes and between different individuals with similar PAH genotypes, reveal that the HPA-phenotype is more complex than that predicted by Mendelian inheritance of alleles at the PAH locus.  相似文献   

8.
Patients with phenylketonuria (PKU) are frequently deficient in the essential trace element selenium (Se), because of their very low protein diet. Using two approaches to investigate T-cell response to proliferative signaling, viz, mitogenesis caused by the monoclonal antibody OKT3 and the plant lectin phytohaemagglutinin (PHA), we demonstrated significantly reduced responses to optimal concentrations of OKT3 in a group of PKU patients with reduced serum Se compared with a normal group (p = 0.0005) and with a group of PKU patients whose serum Se was normal (p = 0.0023). The response of the Se-deficient group to optimal levels of PHA did not differ from that of the normal controls or from that of Se-normal PKU patients. A dose-dependent relationship between serum Se levels and mitogenic response was evident for OKT3 (r = 0.34, p = 0.0154), but not for PHA (r = -0.02, p = 0.9086). We suggest that the reduced response to OKT3 mitogenesis in Se-deficient PKU patients is possibly the consequence of impaired Se-dependent metabolic activity, which affects mitogenic signaling via the T cell antigen receptor (TCR/CD3) complex.  相似文献   

9.
Selenium is a main component of glutathione peroxidase (GPX), a key antioxidant enzyme. Other elements, such as zinc, copper, manganese and iron, are also involved in the pathogenesis of oxidative damage as well as in other important metabolic pathways. The effects of selenium supplementation on the metabolism of these elements have yield controversial results .The aim of this study is to analyse the effects of selenium supplementation on liver, muscle and urinary excretion of zinc, copper, iron and manganese in a situation of oxidative stress, such as protein deficiency. The experimental design included four groups of adult male Sprague–Dawley rats, which received the Lieber–DeCarli control diet, an isocaloric 2 % protein-containing diet and another similar two groups to which selenomethionine (6 mg/l liquid diet) was added. After sacrifice (5 weeks later), muscle, liver and serum selenium were determined, as well as muscle, liver and urinary zinc, copper, manganese and iron and liver GPX activity and liver malondialdehyde. Selenium addition led to decreased liver copper, increased muscle copper, increased copper excretion and increased liver iron, whereas zinc and manganese parameters were essentially unaltered. Muscle, liver and serum selenium were all significantly correlated with liver GPX activity.  相似文献   

10.
The pattern of unconjugated pterins in liver tissue and in urine from patients with atypical forms of phenylketonuria with hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA) has been investigated with a high performance liquid chromatographic technique. Two patients with defects in the biosynthesis of biopterin have been shown to have higher than normal levels of neopterin and lower than normal levels of biopterin. In contrast, a patient with HPA due to a deficiency of dihydropteridine reductase has the reverse urinary pattern, i.e., high biopterin, low neopterin. These results indicate that the ratio of neopterin to biopterin in urine can be of value in discriminating between HPA due to a deficiency of phenylalanine hydroxylase (classic PKU), HPA due to dihydropteridine reductase deficiency, and HPA due to a block in the biosynthesis of biopterin.  相似文献   

11.
A comprehensive population and medical-genetic study was carried out in ten districts and two cities in the Karachay-Cherkess Republic (Russia). As a result, 57 patients with phenylketonuria were revealed. PAH gene genotypes for 40 probands and their diseased and healthy relatives were determined. The mutation spectrum of the PAH gene in the Karachay-Cherkess Republic was investigated. The major mutation in this region is R261X with allelic frequency of 68.4%. We elaborated a convenient system for detection of six PAH gene mutations common in the Karachay-Cherkess Republic, with the total information content of the system being 89.9%. As a result of processing the clinical data, association of the diet and phenylalanine levels in the blood was verified. Genophenotypic analysis confirms the association of the residual activity of phenylalanine hydroxylase and the severity of the disease. It is shown that common mutation R261X is severe and that patients who are homozygous for this mutation have classical phenylketonuria (PKU).  相似文献   

12.
Hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA) is a group of diseases characterized by the persistent elevation of phenylalanine levels in tissues and biological fluids. It is an autosomal recessive disorder affecting 1 in 10,000 individuals in Caucasian populations and about 1 in 6,600 in Catalonia. We report the mutational spectrum of phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency in the population living in Catalonia and the genotype-phenotype correlation. The molecular study was performed in 383 samples corresponding to 115 patients from 99 unrelated families and 268 relatives. We have characterized 90% of the mutant alleles; there were 57 different mutations, 49 of which have previously been described, 8 being novel mutations and two being large deletions. The 57 mutations detected corresponded to: five nonsense, seven frameshift, and eight splice defects, the remainder being missense mutations. These mutations cause 72 different genotypes in the 83 families characterized, confirming the mutational heterogeneity of phenylketonuria (PKU) in the Mediterranean population. According to our biochemical classification, our HPA population is composed of 40 PKU (35%), 36 variant PKU (31%), and 39 non-PKU HPA (34%). Mutations such as IVS 10, A403 V, and E390G correlated as expected with the phenotype and the predicted residual activity in vitro. However, in four cases (165 T, V388 M, R261Q, and Y414 C), the observed metabolic phenotype was not consistent with the predicted genotypic effect. The identification of the mutations in the PAH gene and the genotype-phenotype correlation should facilitate the evaluation of metabolic phenotypes, diagnosis, implementation of optimal dietary therapy, and determination of prognosis in the patients and genetic counselling for the patient's relatives.  相似文献   

13.
Phenylketonuria treatment mainly consists of a phenylalanine-restricted diet but still results in suboptimal neuropsychological outcome, which is at least partly based on cerebral monoamine deficiencies, while, after childhood, treatment compliance decreases. Supplementation of large neutral amino acids (LNAAs) was previously demonstrated in young phenylketonuria mice to target all three biochemical disturbances underlying brain dysfunction in phenylketonuria. However, both its potential in adult phenylketonuria and the comparison with the phenylalanine-restricted diet remain to be established. To this purpose, several LNAA supplements were compared with a severe phenylalanine-restricted diet with respect to brain monoamine and amino acid concentrations in adult C57Bl/6 Pah-enu2 mice. Adult phenylketonuria mice received a phenylalanine-restricted diet, unrestricted diet supplemented with several combinations of LNAAs or AIN-93M control diet for 6 weeks. In addition, adult wild-type mice on AIN-93M diet served as controls. The severe phenylalanine-restricted diet in adult phenylketonuria mice significantly reduced plasma and brain phenylalanine and restored brain monoamine concentrations, while brain concentrations of most nonphenylalanine LNAAs remained subnormal. Supplementation of eight LNAAs was similarly effective as the severe phenylalanine-restricted diet to restore brain monoamines, while brain and plasma phenylalanine concentrations remained markedly elevated. These results provide biochemical support for the effectiveness of the severe phenylalanine-restricted diet and showed the possibilities of LNAA supplementation being equally effective to restore brain monoamines in adult phenylketonuria mice. Therefore, LNAA supplementation is a promising alternative treatment to phenylalanine restriction in adult phenylketonuria patients to further optimize neuropsychological functioning.  相似文献   

14.
We have used a cell-free system derived from hamster brain to investigate protein synthesis during experimental phenylketonuria. In such a system the elongation inhibitor emetine impeded translation in extracts derived from both treated and control animals. On the other hand the initiation inhibitor aurintricarboxylic acid showed no effects on protein synthesis activity of treated hamsters, although it was severely inhibiting in controls. This suggests that initiation is the altered step in brain protein synthesis failure consecutive to phenylketonuria.Abbreviations ATA aurintricarboxylic acid - HPA hyperphenylalaninaemia (hyperphenylalaninaemic) - PHE phenylalanine - PKU phenylketonuria (phenylketonuric) - PR polyribosome  相似文献   

15.
Phenylketonuria (PKU) is an inherited metabolic disorder caused by deficiency of phenylalanine hydroxylase which leads to accumulation of phenylalanine and its metabolites in tissues of patients with severe neurological involvement. Recently, many studies in animal models or patients have reported the role of oxidative stress in PKU. In the present work we studied the effect of lipoic acid against oxidative stress in rat brain provoked by an animal model of hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA), induced by repetitive injections of phenylalanine and α-methylphenylalanine (a phenylalanine hydroxylase inhibitor) for 7 days, on some oxidative stress parameters. Lipoic acid prevented alterations on catalase (CAT) and superoxide dismutase (SOD), and the oxidative damage of lipids, proteins, and DNA observed in HPA rats. In addition, lipoic acid diminished reactive species generation compared to HPA group which was positively correlated to SOD/CAT ratio. We also observed that in vitro Phe inhibited CAT activity while phenyllactic and phenylacetic acids stimulated superoxide dismutase activity. These results demonstrate the efficacy of lipoic acid to prevent oxidative stress induced by HPA model in rats. The possible benefits of lipoic acid administration to PKU patients should be considered.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The hyperphenylalaninemic disorders of classic phenylketonuria (PKU), mild phenylketonuria, and hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA), result from a deficiency of the hepatic enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) or its cofactor (tetrahydrobiopterin). Use of the complementary DNA of this enzyme has allowed the establishment of a restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) haplotype-analysis system. This haplotype analysis system provides the means for determination of mutant PAH alleles in most affected families and is the basis for mutational analysis of the PKU locus. This review is focused on two major areas of current PKU research: (1) the use of DNA haplotype analysis in the study of the population genetics of PAH deficiency, and (2) the study of genotypes, and their various combinations, as a means of explaining and predicting the phenotypic variability observed for the disorders of PAH deficiency.  相似文献   

17.
Hereditary hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA) is a disorder of amino acid metabolism and results from an insufficiency of hepatic phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH). HPA phenotypes form a spectrum ranging from classical phenylketonuria (PKU) to mild hyperphenylalaninemia (MHP). The phenotypic diversity reflects heterogeneity at the molecular level, and more than 320 different mutations in the PAH gene are known to date. The association of 3 mutations (R408W, IVS10 and A403V) common in different European populations with a variable number tandem repeat (VNTR) and short tandem repeat sites (minihaplotype) in the PAH gene was examined in a group of Polish PKU and MHP patients. Additionally, minihaplotypes were established for another 16 mutations. The presented data support the hypothesis that the R408W/VNTR3/STR238 allele originated among pre-Indo-Europeans on the territory in present-day Lithuania and Belarus. Mutation IVS10nt-11g-->a (IVS10) is strongly associated with VNTR7/STR250 minihaplotype and is possibly of Mediterranean origin.  相似文献   

18.
The data from this study showed that the excretion of three major metabolites of phenylalanine in patients with PKU approach normal values at blood phenylalanine levels less than 5.0 mg/dl. The MANOVA showed statistically significant differences in phenyllactate excretion when blood phenylalanine was greater than 10.0 mg/dl. The PL and total metabolite excretion were significantly correlated to blood phenylalanine in multiple samples taken from two individual subjects. Using data obtained from single patient observations may serve as a means for individualizing the PKU diet to insure low levels of phenylalanine metabolites and thus insure optimal development for patients with PKU.  相似文献   

19.
Maternal phenylketonuria. Review with emphasis on pathogenesis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
H L Levy 《Enzyme》1987,38(1-4):312-320
Maternal phenylketonuria (PKU) refers to fetal damage from PKU in the pregnant woman. The progeny from such pregnancies are almost always microcephalic and mentally subnormal and have an increased frequency of congenital heart disease and low birth weight. Treatment with a phenylalanine-restricted diet, if begun before conception, seems to protect the fetus. The degree of protection is much less if dietary treatment is delayed until the pregnancy is in progress. The origin of fetal damage in maternal PKU is not known. Due to placental concentration of amino acids, the fetus is exposed to a higher concentration of phenylalanine than that in the mother, but it is not certain that phenylalanine is the toxic agent. Animal models made hyperphenylalaninemic by the administration of phenylalanine, often accompanied by a phenylalanine hydroxylase inhibitor, do not reproduce the full maternal PKU syndrome; but fetuses and newborns from these models have had reduced growth of the body and brain, and offspring later may show evidence of impaired learning ability.  相似文献   

20.
Molecular characterization of phenylketonuria in Japanese patients   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
We characterized phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) genotypes of Japanese patients with phenylketonuria (PKU) and hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA). PKU and HPA mutations in 41 Japanese patients were identified by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis and direct sequencing, followed by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis to find a large deletion involving exons 5 and 6. Of 82 mutant alleles, 76 (92%) were genotyped showing 21 mutations. The major mutations were R413P (30.5%), R243Q (7.3%), R241 C (7.3%), IVS4nt-1 (7.3%), T278I (7.3%), E6nt-96A→g (6.1%), Y356X (4.9%), R111X (3.7%), and 442–706delE5/6 (2.4%). Eight new mutations (L52 S, delS70, S70P, Y77X, IVS3nt-1, A132 V, W187 C, and C265Y) and a polymorphism of IVS10nt-14 were detected. In vitro PAH activities of mutant PAH cDNA constructs were determined by a COS cell expression system. Six mutations, viz., R408Q, L52 S, R241 C, S70P, V388 M, and R243Q, had 55%, 27%, 25%, 20%, 16% and 10% of the in vitro PAH activity of normal constructs, respectively. The mean pretreatment phenylalanine concentration (0.83±0.21 mmol/l) of patients carrying the R408Q, R241 C, or L52 S mutation and a null mutation was significantly lower (P<0.0005) than that (1.99±0.65 mmol/l) of patients with both alleles carrying mutations associated with a severe genotype. Simple linear regression analysis showed a correlation between pretreatment phenylalanine concentrations and predicted PAH activity in 29 Japanese PKU patients (y=31.9–1.03x, r=0.59, P<0.0001). Genotype determination is useful in the prediction of biochemical and clinical phenotypes in PKU and can be of particular help in managing patients with this disorder. Received: 24 July 1998 / Accepted: 12 September 1998  相似文献   

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