Molecular genetics of pseudoxanthoma elasticum: type and frequency of mutations in ABCC6

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_8EE1465A1476
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Molecular genetics of pseudoxanthoma elasticum: type and frequency of mutations in ABCC6
Journal
Human Mutation
Author(s)
Miksch  S., Lumsden  A., Guenther  U. P., Foernzler  D., Christen-Zach  S., Daugherty  C., Ramesar  R. K., Lebwohl  M., Hohl  D., Neldner  K. H., Lindpaintner  K., Richards  R. I., Struk  B.
ISSN
1098-1004 (Electronic)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
09/2005
Volume
26
Number
3
Pages
235-48
Notes
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't --- Old month value: Sep
Abstract
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) is a systemic heritable disorder that affects the elastic tissue in the skin, eye, and cardiovascular system. Mutations in the ABCC6 gene cause PXE. We performed a mutation screen in ABCC6 using haplotype analysis in conjunction with direct sequencing to achieve a mutation detection rate of 97%. This screen consisted of 170 PXE chromosomes in 81 families, and detected 59 distinct mutations (32 missense, eight nonsense, and six likely splice-site point mutations; one small insertion; and seven small and five large deletions). Forty-three of these mutations are novel variants, which increases the total number of PXE mutations to 121. While most mutations are rare, three nonsense mutations, a splice donor site mutation, and the large deletion comprising exons 23-29 (c.2996_4208del) were identified as relatively frequent PXE mutations at 26%, 5%, 3.5%, 3%, and 11%, respectively. Chromosomal haplotyping with two proximal and two distal polymorphic markers flanking ABCC6 demonstrated that most chromosomes that carry these relatively frequent PXE mutations have related haplotypes specific for these mutations, which suggests that these chromosomes originate from single founder mutations. The types of mutations found support loss-of-function as the molecular mechanism for the PXE phenotype. In 76 of the 81 families, the affected individuals were either homozygous for the same mutation or compound heterozygous for two mutations. In the remaining five families with one uncovered mutation, affected showed allelic compound heterozygosity for the cosegregating PXE haplotype. This demonstrates pseudo-dominance as the relevant inheritance mechanism, since disease transmission to the next generation always requires one mutant allelic variant from each parent. In contrast to other previous clinical and molecular claims, our results show evidence only for recessive PXE. This has profound consequences for the genetic counseling of families with PXE.
Keywords
Amino Acid Sequence DNA Mutational Analysis Female Genetic Markers Genotype Haplotypes Humans Male Models, Genetic Molecular Sequence Data Multidrug Resistance-Associated Proteins/*genetics *Mutation Polymorphism, Genetic Pseudoxanthoma Elasticum/*genetics
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
25/01/2008 17:35
Last modification date
20/08/2019 15:52
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