Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5906411 | Gene | 2013 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
We investigated the mutation spectrum of the phenylalanine hydroxylase gene (PAH) in a cohort of patients from 135 Slovak PKU families. Mutational screening of the known coding region, including conventional intron splice sites, was performed using high-resolution melting analysis, with subsequent sequencing analysis of the samples showing deviated melting profiles compared to control samples. The PAH gene was also screened for deletions and duplications using MLPA analysis. Forty-eight different disease causing mutations were identified in our patient group, including 30 missense, 8 splicing, 7 nonsense, 2 large deletions and 1 small deletion with frameshift; giving a detection rate of 97.6%. The most prevalent mutation was the p.R408W, occurring in 47% of all alleles, which concurs with results from neighboring and other Slavic countries. Other frequent mutations were: p.R158Q (5.3%), IVS12 + 1G>A (5.3%), p.R252W (5.1%), p.R261Q (3.9%) and p.A403V (3.6%). We also identified three novel missense mutations: p.F233I, p.R270I, p.F331S and one novel variant: c.â 30A>T in the proximal part of the PAH gene promoter. A spectrum of 84 different genotypes was observed and a genotype based predictions of BH4-responsiveness were assessed. Among all genotypes, 36 were predicted to be BH4-responsive represented by 51 PKU families. In addition, genotype-phenotype correlations were performed.
Keywords
MLPAMPKUBH4-responsivenessMild hyperphenylalaninemiaThermus aquaticusMHPPRABH4dNTPRFLPPKUPHEPAHHRMmRNAphenylketonuriamessenger RNAEDTAEthylenediaminetetraacetic acidTaqMutation analysisHuman variationmultiplex ligation-dependent probe amplificationTyrTyrosinebase pairsdeoxyribonucleoside triphosphateannealing temperatureHigh resolution meltingconcentrationPhenylalanine hydroxylasePhenylalanineMelting curveHPAHyperphenylalaninemiaunitpolymerase chain reactionPCRrestriction-fragment length polymorphismkilobases
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Genetics
Authors
Emil Polak, Andrej Ficek, Jan Radvanszky, Andrea Soltysova, Otto Urge, Eleonora Cmelova, Dana Kantarska, Ludevit Kadasi,