Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5913349 | Blood Cells, Molecules, and Diseases | 2016 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Hexokinase (HK) is a key enzyme of glycolysis, the only metabolic pathway able to provide the red blood cell with ATP. HK deficiency is a very rare hereditary disorder with severe chronic nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia (HNSHA) as a major clinical feature. To date, only 24 patients with HK deficiency have been identified. Here, we report the molecular analysis of six new cases of HK deficiency. A total of six different mutations were detected in HK1, four of them described here for the first time: c.2599CÂ >Â T p.(His867Tyr), c.1799CÂ >Â T p.(Thr600Met), c.873-2AÂ >Â G and c.493-1GÂ >Â A. The pathogenic nature of the identified missense mutations was confirmed by biochemical and 3-dimensional structural analysis. The effects of the novel splice site mutation c.873-2AÂ >Â G were studied at the level of pre-mRNA processing, and confirmed at the protein level. All together, these results provide a better insight into the pathogenesis of this rare red cell disorder, and contribute to a better understanding of the genotype-phenotype correlation in HK deficiency.
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Authors
Pavla Koralkova, Renata Mojzikova, Brigitte van Oirschot, Christine Macartney, Pavel Timr, Joan Lluis Vives Corrons, Zuzana Striezencova Laluhova, Katerina Lejhancova, Vladimir Divoky, Richard van Wijk,