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1.
Summary Cystic fibrosis (CF) is an autosomal recessive disease caused by different mutations in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene. The frequency of the major mutation (F508) in the Hungarian population is 64%. To identify other common mutations in CF families from Hungary, 30 nonF508 CF chromosomes were analyzed for selected mutations in exon 11 (G551D, R553X, G542X), intron 4 (621+1GT), intron 10 (1717–1GA), exon 20 (W1282X), and in exon 21 (N1303K) of the CFTR gene. In 6 of the 30 non-F508 CF chromosomes the following mutations were detected: R553X, G542X, 1717–1GA, W1282X, and N1303K. After analysis of the above eight mutations, 30% of CF chromosomes are as yet undefined and further analysis is planned.  相似文献   

2.
In order to contribute to a better understanding of the dispersion of cystic fibrosis (CF) mutations in the South of France, seven diallelic and three multiallelic markers [three upstream of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene (XV-2c, KM.19 and J44) and seven intragenic polymorphisms (IVS6A, IVS8CA, M470V, T854T, IVS17BTA, IVS17BCA and TUB18)] were analyzed for 143 ΔF508 chromosomes, 100 CF chromosomes carrying 85 non-ΔF508 and 15 unknown mutations, and 198 normal CFTR alleles. The study provides haplotypic data for 39 different CF mutations, which should be useful in diagnosis by haplotypic analysis and detection of the associated mutations. A major haplotype [2-1-2-7-16-2-1-(30/31)-13-1] was found in normal chromosomes, which should be the most ancient in the Caucasoid population. The most frequent haplotypes in normal chromosomes were associated with 16 different non-ΔF508 mutations, suggesting that there was no preferential haplotype on which these mutations arose. Several mutations were each associated with more than one haplotype, as the result of slippage at one or two of the three microsatellites (ΔF508, G542X, N1303K, G85E, E585X, K710X and 2184delA) or recombination (1717-1G→A, R334W, L206W, R1162X and Y122X). Haplotypes for the most common CFTR mutations (ΔF508, G542X, N1303K) revealed that a large number of alleles were generated by slippage at the microsatellite loci, suggesting that they are the most ancient CF mutations. Other mutations were associated with haplotypes that were different either at several diallelic sites (R334W) or at both diallelic and microsatellite markers (R1162X and R1158X), which is more suggestive of recurrence. Twenty recombinations were detected among the CF mutant alleles analyzed, 75% of them occurring in the second half of the CFTR gene. The higher mutational heterogeneity and the haplotypic variability reported in this small population from the Mediterranean area are consistent with an earlier appearance of CFTR mutations in southern Europe than in central and northern Europe, and an earlier origin and expansion of this population. Received: 19 February 1996 / Revised: 10 April 1996  相似文献   

3.
Mutational analysis of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) gene was performed in 98 unrelated CF chromosomes from 49 Lithuanian CF patients through a combined approach in which the p.F508del mutation was first screened by allele-specific PCR while CFTR mutations in nonp.F508del chromosomes have been screened for by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis analysis. A CFTR mutation was characterized in 62.2% of CF chromosomes, two of which (2.0%) have been previously shown to carry a large gene deletion CFTRdele2,3(21 kb). The most frequent Lithuanian CF mutation is p.F508del (52.0%). Seven CFTR mutations, p.N1303K (2.0%), p.R75Q (1.0%), p.G314R (1.0%), p.R553X (4.2%), p.W1282X (1.0%), and g.3944delGT (1.0%), accounted for 10.1% of Lithuanian CF chromosomes. It was not possible to characterize 35.8% of the CF Lithuanian chromosomes. Analysis of intron 8 (TG)mTn and M470V polymorphic loci did not permit the characterization of the CFTR dysfunction underlying the CF phenotype in the patients for which no CFTR mutation was identified. Thus, screening of the eight CFTR mutations identified in this study and of the large deletion CFTRdele2,3(21 kb) allows the implementation of an early molecular or confirmatory CF diagnosis for 65% of Lithuanian CF chromosomes.  相似文献   

4.
Microsatellite haplotypes were determined for 117 chromosomes carrying the four most frequent mutations in the cystic fibrosis (CF) gene identified in the Breton population of Celtic origin, as well as for 83 normal chromosomes (noncarriers of a CF mutation). Each of the three non-ΔF508 mutations was associated with a single haplotype: 1078delT with 16-31-13, G551D with 16-7-17, and W846X with 16-32-13. Although these results suggest identity-by-descent for each mutation, recurrent mutations, although unlikely, could not be completely ruled out. The four most frequent haplotypes on normal chromosomes and the three most frequent haplotypes on ΔF508 chromosomes are the same as those found in Ireland, Spain, and Italy. This suggests that some haplotypes, associated or not with the ΔF508 mutation, were present in an ancestral population from which all four populations descended. Received: 27 November 1995 / Revised: 1 February 1996  相似文献   

5.
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is one of the most common severe autosomal recessive disorders in Caucasian populations. A mutation in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene causes this disorder. Reported here is the first analysis of CF mutations in the Maine population. We have screened 263 CF chromosomes for 16 previously reported mutations. Analysis of DNA from 124 apparently unrelated CF patients and 15 obligate carrier parents (whose partner and affected child were unavailable for study) resulted in the identification of 91% of the CF alleles and complete genotyping of 85% of the patients. The frequencies (%) of these mutations in the Maine population are ΔF508 (75% of the chromosomes), G85E (0.76), R117H (0.76), I148T (1.1), 621+1G→T (1.1), 711+1G→T (3.0), A455E (1.1), 1717-1G→A (1.1), G542X (1.9), G551D (1.9), R560T (0.76), Y1092X (0.38), W1282X (0.38), and N1303K (1.5). The exon 10 mutation, ΔI507, and the exon 11 mutation, R553X, were not observed. Surprisingly, whereas only 5% of the alleles remain unidentified in the non-French population, the unidentified proportion in the French population is 19%. CF testing for the Maine population will be further improved as the as yet unidentified CF mutations in this population are characterized. Received: 17 January 1996 / Revised: 28 February 1996  相似文献   

6.
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is thought to be rare among the Arab populations from the Middle East and little data have been reported so far. We have studied a sample of 20 families living in Lebanon for several generations and who have at least one child with CF. These families are mainly from the Maronite, Greek Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Shiite or Sunnite groups. We found a 50% rate of consanguineous marriage, independent of the community of origin. The distribution of CF genotypes was determined through the screening of all exons of the CFTR (cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator) gene by the technique of denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis combined with asymmetric amplification DNA sequencing. A total of ten different mutations accounting for 87.5% of 32 unrelated CF alleles was identified, including two novel putative mutations (E672del and IVS21-28G→A). Three mutations, ΔF508 (37.5%), W1282X (15.6%), and N1303K (9.4%) accounted for 62.5% of CF alleles. Interestingly, in the Maronite group, 66.7% of the ΔF508 chromosomes were found to be associated with allele 7 of the IVS8(T)tract, contrasting with the absolute linkage disequilibrium between European ΔF508 chromosomes and allele 9. During this study, two previously undescribed polymorphisms (IVS14a + 17del5 and 2691T/C) were also identified. Received: 2 January 1997 / Accepted: 16 March 1997  相似文献   

7.
We showed elsewhere that the pancreatic function status of cystic fibrosis (CF) patients could be correlated to mutations in the CF transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene. Although the majority of CF mutations--including the most common, delta F508--strongly correlated with pancreatic insufficiency (PI), approximately 10% of the mutant alleles may confer pancreatic sufficiency (PS). To extend this observation, genomic DNA of 538 CF patients with well-documented pancreatic function status were analyzed for a series of known mutations in their CFTR genes. Only 20 of the 25 mutations tested were found in this population. They accounted for 84% of the CF chromosomes, with delta F508 being the most frequent (71%), and the other mutations accounted for less than 5% each. A total of 30 different, complete genotypes could be determined in 394 (73%) of the patients. The data showed that each genotype was associated only with PI or only with PS, but not with both. This result is thus consistent with the hypothesis that PI and PS in CF are predisposed by the genotype at the CFTR locus; the PS phenotype occurs in patients who have one or two mild CFTR mutations, such as R117H, R334W, R347P, A455E, and P574H, whereas the PI phenotype occurs in patients with two severe alleles, such as delta F508, delta I507, Q493X, G542X, R553X, W1282X, 621 + 1G----T, 1717-1G----A, 556delA, 3659delC, I148T, G480C, V520F, G551D, and R560T.  相似文献   

8.
Summary In order to facilitate the screening for the less common mutations in the cystic fibrosis (CF) gene viz., the CF transmembrane conductance regulator gene (CFTR), marker haplotypes were determined for German nonCF (N) and CF chromosomes by polymerase chain reaction analysis of four polymorphisms upstream of the CF gene (XV-2c, KM.19, MP6-D9, J44) and six intragenic polymorphisms (GATT, TUB9, M470V, T854T, TUB18, TUB20) that span the CFTR gene from exon 6 through exon 21. Novel informative sequence variants of CFTR were detected in front of exons 10 (1525-61 A or G), 19 (3601-65 C or A), and 21 (4006-200 A or G). The CF locus exhibits strong long-range marker-marker linkage disequilibrium with breakpoints of recombination between XV-2c and KM.19, and between exons 10 and 19 of CFTR. Marker alleles of GATT-TUB9 and TUB18-TUB20 were found to be in absolute linkage disequilibrium. Four major haplotypes encompass more than 90% of German N and CF chromosomes. Fifteen CFTR mutations detected on 421 out of 500 CF chromosomes were each identified on one of these four predominant 7-marker haplotypes. Whereas all analysed F508 chromosomes carried the same KM.19-D9-J44-GATT-TUB9-M470V-T854T haplotype, another frequent mutation in Germany, R553X, was identified on two different major haplotypes. Hence, a priori haplotyping cannot exclude a particular CF mutation, but in combination with population genetic data, enables mutations to be ranked by decreasing probability.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The F508 deletion in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene was found in 8 out of 30 Turkish cystic fibrosis (CF) chromosomes (27%). Five Turkish ΔF508 CF chromosomes were associated with the risk haplotype B in KM19 (2 allele)/XV2c (1 allele). In the Turkish population, cystic fibrosis is predominantly caused by mutations other than the F508 deletion.  相似文献   

10.
In order to determine the spectrum of cystic fibrosis (CF) mutations in the Turkish population, a complete coding region of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene including exon-intron boundaries, on 122 unrelated CF chromosomes from 73 Turkish CF families was analysed by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis and multiplex heteroduplex analysis on MDE gel matrix. In addition to 15 previously reported mutations and 12 polymorphisms, three novel mutations, namely 3172delAC, P1013L and M1028I, were detected. ΔF508 was found to be present on 18.8% of CF chromosomes. The second most common mutation was 1677delTA, with a frequency of 7.3%, followed by G542X and 2183AA→G mutations, with frequencies of 4.9%. These four most common mutations in Turkish CF population account for approximately 36% of mutations. This study could only detect 52.5% of disease-causing mutations in this population; 47.5% of CF alleles remain to be identified, reflecting the high molecular heterogeneity of the Turkish population. Received: 16 June 1997 / Accepted: 18 September 1997  相似文献   

11.
The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene of 110 cystic fibrosis (CF) patients from the south-west of Germany was screened for 12 different mutations. This analysis resulted in an identification of 79% of all CF mutations and a complete genotype in 66% of the families. The most common mutation found was F508 (67%). Another 5 mutations accounted for a further 12.5% (4% G542X; 3% R553X; 3% N1303K; 2% 1717-1 GA; 0.5% G551D) whereas 6 mutations (R117H, A455E, I507, S549I, S549N, and R1162X) were not found. Fifty-four (49%) patients were AF508 homozygotes and 18 (16.5%) were compound heterozygotes for F508 and one of the rarer mutations. These frequencies differ slightly from those found in the north of Germany and considerably from those reported from the south of Europe, which seems to be consistent with a north to south decline of the relative abundance of F508. Two patients, age 6 and 25 years, were compound heterozygotes for G542X and N1303K. The clinical features of the 6 year old were characterised by severe gastrointestinal and as yet only mild pulmonary complications whereas the 25 year old manifested severe pulmonary and gastrointestinal symptoms indicating that the N1303K mutation of the C-terminal CFTR nucleotide binding fold significantly impairs protein function in both the pancreas and the lungs.  相似文献   

12.
We have determined the frequency of deletion F508 and mutation G542X, a nonsense mutation in exon 11 of the cystic fibrosis (CF) gene, in a sample of 400 Spanish CF families. Mutation G542X represents 8% of the total number of CF mutations in Spain, making it the second most common mutation after the F508 deletion, which accounts for 48% of CF chromosomes. G542X has a higher frequency in the Mediterranean coastal area (14%) and in the Canary Islands (25%). About 70% of G542X chromosomes are from Andalucia, Múrcia, Valencia, Catalunya and the Canary Islands. The F508 deletion has its highest frequency in the Basque Country (83%). Mutation G542X is associated with the same rare haplotype that is found in association with the F508 mutation. The haplotype homogeneity found for G542X, even when intragenic microsatellites (IVS8CA, IVS17BTA and IVS17BCA) are considered, allows us to postulate that this mutation arose from a single mutational event. The geographic distribution of mutations F508 and G542X suggests that F508 was present in the Iberian Peninsula before the Indo-European invasions, and that G542X was introduced into Spain, via the Mediterranean Sea, probably by the Phoenicians, between 2500 and 3000 years ago.  相似文献   

13.
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is one of the most common autosomal recessive disorders in white populations. Significant regional differences in CF mutations among affected individuals have been reported. We have studied the geographic distribution of the relative frequencies of the three most common Dutch CF mutations, ΔF508, A455E, and G542X, by analyzing data on area of residence of CF patients. Significantly higher relative frequencies of the A455E mutation and the G542X mutation were observed in the South-West and the South-East, respectively. A uniform distribution of relative frequencies was found for the ΔF508 mutation. The results of our study show that, even in a small country such as The Netherlands, certain CF mutations may be more common in one region than in another. Received: 19 February 1998 / Accepted: 20 February 1998  相似文献   

14.
Methods for analysis of multiple cystic fibrosis mutations   总被引:10,自引:2,他引:8  
Summary A large number of mutations causing cystic fibrosis (CF) have been reported. In an attempt to improve methods for genetic diagnosis and for heterozygote screening, we evaluated methods for efficient analysis of the F508, G542X, G551D, R553X, and N1303K mutations. We found that multiple mutations can be analyzed simultaneously using hybridization with allelespecific oligonucleotides. Alternatively all of these mutations can be detected by amplification of DNA followed by restriction enzyme digestion and analysis on polyacrylamide gels. A previously reported method for use of modified primers for DNA amplification to allow detection of virtually any single-base change by restriction enzyme analysis proved particularly useful. The common F508 mutation and three mutations in exon 11 were analyzed using a multiplex amplification reaction followed by double digestion with restriction enzymes and electrophoresis in a single lane on a polyacrylamide gel. In a sample of 439 CF chromosomes from North American Caucasians, the frequencies of various mutations were as follows: F508=75.8%, G542X=2.7%, G551D=3.2%, R553X=1.4%, and N1303K=1.4% for a total of 84.5% detection of CF chromosomes by analysis for these five mutations.  相似文献   

15.
The identification of a common mutation, delta F508, in the CFTR gene allowed, for the first time, the detection of cystic fibrosis (CF) carriers in the general population. Further genetic studies revealed > 100 additional disease-causing mutations in this gene, few of which occur on > 1% of CF chromosomes in any ethnic group. Prior to establishing counseling guidelines and carrier risk assessments, we sought to establish the frequencies of the CFTR mutations that are present in CF families living in the Chicago area, a region notable for its ethnic heterogeneity. Our sample included 283 unrelated CF carriers, with the following ethnic composition: 78% non-Ashkenazi Caucasians, 5% Ashkenazi, 9% African-American, 3% Mexican, 0.3% Native American, and 5% mixed ancestry. When a panel of 10 mutations (delta F508, delta I507, G542X, G551D, R553X, S549N, R1162X, W1282X, N1303K, and 1717-1G-->A) was used, detection rates ranged from 75% in non-Ashkenazi Caucasians to 40% in African-Americans. These data suggest that the goal of screening for 90%-95% of CF mutations may be unrealistic in this and other, similar U.S. populations.  相似文献   

16.
We have screened 175 patients for molecular defects in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene using nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), and sequencing. Six different mutations (F508del, G542X, 621+1G --> T, 2789+5G --> A, R1070Q, and S466X) accounted for 79.71% of CF alleles, with the F508del mutation showing a frequency of 72.28%. Another 12 mutations (R334W, 2184insA, I507del, 1525-1G --> A, E585X, R75X, M1I, 457TAT --> G, 574delA, 2723delTT, A120T, and 2907delTT) covered an additional 3.36%. A novel mutation (2723delTT) was found in one CF patient (F508del/2723delTT). Thus, a total of 18 mutations cover 82.57% of CF alleles. During our study, 72% of families at risk for having a CF child were found to be fully informative for prenatal diagnosis. Prenatal diagnosis was performed on 56 families; 76 analyses resulting in 16 affected, 38 carriers, and 22 healthy fetuses. These results imply that the molecular basis of CF in Serbia and Montenegro is highly heterogeneous, as is observed in other eastern and southern European populations. Because we detected more then 80% of CFTR alleles, results could be used for planning future screening and appropriate genetic counseling programs in our country.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Three mutations in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene were discovered in a pancreas-insufficient patient with cystic fibrosis (CF) who displayed an uncommon combination of almost normal chloride concentration in sweat tests and typical symptoms of gastrointestinal and pulmonary disease. The R553Q mutation was found on the maternal F508-CFTR gene. Codon 553 is located within a consensus motif of the ATP-binding cassette transport proteins at a less conserved position. Other members of this protein superfamily contain a glutamine instead of arginine at the homologous position, suggesting a modulating rather than disease-causing role of the R553Q mutation in CFTR. The amplification refractory mutation system did not detect the R553Q mutation in a further 65 normal, 113 F508, and 91 non-F508 CF chromosomes. The index case carried the R553X nonsense mutation on the paternal chromosome. The R553X mutation was present on a further 9 out of 86 German nonF508 CF chromosomes linked with the XV2c-KM19Mp6d9-J44-GATT haplotypes 2-2-2-1-1 and 1-1-2-1-2. The location of R553X on separate haplotypes including both alleles of the intragenic GATT repeat suggests an ancient and/or multiple origins of the R553X mutations. The association of the genotype of the CFTR mutation and the clinical phenotype was assessed for the patients carrying the related genotypes F508/F508 (n = 80), F508/R553X (n = 9) and F508-R553Q/R553X (n = 1). In compound heterozygotes, the median chloride concentration in pilocarpine iontophoresis sweat tests was significantly lower than in the F508 homozygotes (P < 0.01). The patient groups were significantly different with respect to the distributions of the centiles for height (P < 0.001) and weight (P < 0.01) as the most sensitive predictors of the course and prognosis in CF. Growth retardation was more pronounced in the compound heterozygotes.  相似文献   

18.
Congenital absence of the vas deferens (CAVD) is a frequent cause for obstructive azoospermia and accounts for 1%–2% of male infertility. A high incidence of mutations of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene has recently been reported in males with CAVD. We have investigated a cohort of 106 German patients with congenital bilateral or unilateral absence of the vas deferens for mutations in the coding region, flanking intron regions and promotor sequences of the CFTR gene. Of the CAVD patients, 75% carried CFTR mutations or disease-associated CFTR variants, such as the “5T” allele, on both chromosomes. The distribution of mutation genotypes clearly differed from that observed in cystic fibrosis. None of the CAVD patients was homozygous for ΔF508 and none was compound heterozygous for ΔF508 and a nonsense or frameshift mutation. Instead, homozygosity was found for a few mild missense or splicing mutations, and the majority of CAVD mutations were missense substitutions. Twenty-one German CAVD patients were compound heterozygous for ΔF508 and R117H, which was the most frequent CAVD genotype in our study group. Haplotype analysis indicated a common origin for R117H in our population, whereas another frequent CAVD mutation, viz. the “5T allele” was a recurrent mutation on different intragenic haplotypes and multiple ethnic backgrounds. We identified a total of 46 different mutations and variants, of which 15 mutations have not previously been reported. Thirteen novel missense mutations and one unique amino-acid insertion may be confined to the CAVD phenotype. A few splice or missense variants, such as F508C or 1716 G→A, are proposed here as possible candidate CAVD mutations with an apparently reduced penetrance. Clinical examination of patients with CFTR mutations on both chromosomes revealed elevated sweat chloride concentrations and discrete symptoms of respiratory disease in a subset of patients. Thus, our collaborative study shows that CAVD without renal malformation is a primary genital form of cystic fibrosis in the vast majority of German patients and links the particular expression of clinical symptoms in CAVD with a distinct subset of CFTR mutation genotypes. Received: 15 April 1997 / Accepted: 29 April 1997  相似文献   

19.
Summary The cystic fibrosis (CF) gene was recently identified as a gene spanning 250 kilobases (kbp) and coding for a 1480 amino acid protein, cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR). Approximately 70% of CF mutations involve a three-base-pair deletion in CFTR exon 10, resulting in the loss of a phenylalanine at position 508 in the gene product (ΔF508). In order to screen for other molecular defects, we have used a strategy based on denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-amplified gene segments. This method, which permits rapid detection of any sequence change in a given DNA stretch, was used successfully to analyse 61 non-ΔF508 CF chromosomes from French CF patients. A study of CFTR exons 10, 11, 14a, 15 and 20 detected three mutations located in exons 14a, 15 and 20, along with several nucleotide sequence polymorphisms. These nucleotide changes were identified by direct sequencing of PCR fragments displaying altered electrophoretic behaviour, together with some of the polymorphisms and mutations previously characterized by others. The strategy presented here constitutes a valuable tool for the development of carrier testing for individuals or couples with a family history of cystic fibrosis, and will contribute to deciphering the functionally important regions of the CFTR gene.  相似文献   

20.
Frequency of the ΔF508 mutation on cystic fibrosis chromosomes in Denmark   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Summary We have investigated the frequency of the ΔF508 mutation on cystic fibrosis (CF) chromosomes in Denmark. Of 304 chromosome tested, 86.8% have the ΔF508 mutation. The majority of the chromosomes with this mutation are found on chromosomes with the XV2c/KM19 haplotype B (97.3%), whereas 15/16 chromosomes with haplotype C have another mutation, confirming that only very few mutations will account for the majority of CF genes in the Danish population.  相似文献   

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