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Novel and recurrent tyrosine aminotransferase gene mutations in tyrosinemia typeII
Authors:Regina Hühn  Heike Stoermer  Beate Klingele  Elke Bausch  Alberto Fois  Mariangela Farnetani  Maja Di Rocco  Joelle Boué  Jean M Kirk  Rosalind Coleman  G Scherer
Institution:Institut für Humangenetik und Anthropologie der Universit?t, Breisacher Strasse 33, D-79106 Freiburg i. Br., Germany Tel.: +49-761-270-7030; Fax: +49-761-270-7041; e-mail: scherer@sun2.ruf.uni-freiburg.de, DE
Istituto Clinica Pediatrica, Università di Siena, Via Bracci 16, I-53100 Siena, Italy, IT
2A Divisione Medicina Pediatria, Istituto Gaslini, I-16148 Genova, Italy, IT
Centres d’Etudes de Biologie Prénatale, Chateau de Longchamp, Bois de Boulogne, F-75016 Paris, France, FR
Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Sciennes Road, Edinburgh, EH9 1LF, UK, GB
Department of Pediatrics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, CB7220 Clinical Sciences Building, Chapel Hill, NC 27599–7220, USA, US
Abstract:Tyrosinemia typeII (Richner-Hanhart syndrome, RHS) is a disorder of autosomal recessive inheritance characterized by keratitis, palmoplantar hyperkeratosis, mental retardation, and elevated blood tyrosine levels. The disease results from deficiency in hepatic tyrosine aminotransferase (TAT). We have previously described one deletion and six different point mutations in four RHS patients. We have now analyzed the TAT genes in a further seven unrelated RHS families from Italy, France, the United Kingdom, and the United States. We have established PCR conditions for the amplification of all twelve TAT exons and have screened the products for mutations by direct sequence analysis or by first performing single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis. We have thus identified the presumably pathological mutations in eight RHS alleles, including two nonsense mutations (R57X, E411X) and four amino acid substitutions (R119W, L201R, R433Q, R433W). Only the R57X mutation, which was found in one Scottish and two Italian families, has been previously reported in another Italian family. Haplotype analysis indicates that this mutation, which involves a CpG dinucleotide hot spot, has a common origin in the three Italian families but arose independently in the Scottish family. Two polymorphisms have also been detected, viz., a protein polymorphism, P15S, and a silent substitution S103S (TCG→TCA). Expression of R433Q and R433W demonstrate reduced activity of the mutant proteins. In all, twelve different TAT gene mutations have now been identified in tyrosinemia typeII. Received: 8 October 1997 / Accepted: 29 October 1997
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