Severity of mutation in the phenylalanine hydroxylase gene influences phenylalanine metabolism in phenylketonuria and hyperphenylalaninaemia heterozygotes
- 9 July 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease
- Vol. 17 (2) , 215-222
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00711621
Abstract
We examined whether the degree of residual activity from the mutant phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) allele affected phenylalanine metabolism in heterozygotes for phenylketonuria (PKU) or non-PKU hyperphenylalaninaemia (HPA). Discriminant analysis was carried out to find the function of fasting plasma concentrations of phenylalanine (PHE) and tyrosine (TYR) that best separated carriers from non-carriers. This function (0.103TYR −0.214PHECORR −4.499) was subsequently used as the dependent variable, with thein vitro activity of the expressed mutant PAH as the independent variable, in a regression analysis performed on heterozygotes for mutations that had been studied in a eukaryotic cell expression system. This analysis showed a significant correlation (r=0.40,n=140,pin vitro expression analysis, in the mutant PAH gene is reflected in the biochemical phenotype of heterozygotes. This result emphasizes the relevance of the cell expression system used for establishing the relative severities of most mutations at the PAH locus. Differences in the activities from the carried mutant PAH allele on phenylalanine metabolism in heterozygotes are, however, small compared to the activity from the normal PAH allele and are easily obscured by other factors leading to inter- or intra-individual variation in phenylalanine metabolism. Fasting plasma concentrations of phenylalanine and tyrosine thus can not be used to predict the severity of the carried PAH mutation in individual PKU or HPA heterozygotes.Keywords
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