Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2602261 Toxicology Letters 2006 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

Mercaptopyruvate sulfurtransferase (MPST) plays a central role in both cysteine degradation and cyanide detoxification. Moreover, deficiency in MPST activity has been suggested to be responsible for a rare inheritable disorder known as mercaptolactate-cysteine disulfiduria (MCDU). To date, no mutation of the human MPST gene has been reported. We developed a screening strategy to search for mutations in the MPST gene of 50 unrelated French individuals. Two intronic polymorphisms (IVS1 − 110C > G and IVS2 + 39C > T) and a nonsense mutation (Tyr85Stop) were identified and their functional consequences were assessed in vivo by measurement of erythrocyte MPST activity and/or in vitro using heterologous expression or transient transfection assay. The nonsense mutation likely leads to the synthesis of a severely truncated protein without enzymatic activity, as supported by our in vitro data. This work constitutes the first report of the existence of a functional genetic polymorphism affecting MPST and should be of great help to investigate certain disorders such as MCDU.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
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