Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8455748 | Mutation Research/Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis | 2015 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
In blood, the hydrogen peroxide concentration is regulated by catalase. Decreased activity of catalase may lead to increased hydrogen peroxide concentration, which may contribute to the manifestation of age-related disease. The aim of this study is to examine association of decreased blood catalase activity and catalase exon mutations in patients (n = 617) with diabetes (n = 380), microcytic anemia (n = 58), beta-thalassemia (n = 43) and presbycusis (n = 136) and in controls (n = 295). Overall, 51 patients (8.3%) had less than half of normal blood catalase activity. Their genomic DNA was used for mutation screening of all exons and exon/intron boundaries with polymerase chain reaction-single-strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) and PCR-heteroduplex analyses, and mutations were verified with nucleotide sequencing. Seven patients (type 2 diabetes (n = 3), gestational diabetes (n = 1), microcytic anemia (n = 2)) had four novel catalase exon mutations namely, c.106_107insC, p.G36Afs*5(n = 3, Hungarian type G1), c.379C>T, p.R127Y (n = 2, Hungarian type H1), c.390T>C, p.R129L, (n = 1, Hungarian type H2) and c.431A>T, p.N143V (n = 1, Hungarian type H3). In patients with decreased blood catalase, the incidence of acatalasemia mutations was significantly high (P < 0.0002) in microcytic anemia, type 2 and gestational diabetes. The four novel mutations were probably responsible for low blood catalase activity in 7/51 patients. In the remainder of the cases, other polymorphisms and epigenetic/regulatory factors may be involved.
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Authors
Terez Nagy, Erika Paszti, Miklos Kaplar, Harjit Pal Bhattoa, Laszlo Goth,