Molecular basis of group A xeroderma pigmentosum: A missense mutation and two deletions located in a zinc finger consensus sequence of the XPAC gene
- 1 March 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Human Genetics
- Vol. 88 (6) , 603-607
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02265282
Abstract
The molecular basis of group A xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) was investigated, and 3 mutations located in a zinc finger consensus sequence (nucleotide 313–387) of the XP group A complementing (XPAC) gene were identified in 2 Caucasian patients GM2990 and GM2009 who had typical symptoms of group A XP. The first mutation was a C deletion at nucleotide 374. Patient GM2990 was a homozygote for this mutation. The second mutation was a 5-bp deletion (CTTAT) at nucleotides 349–353. The third mutation was a G to T transversion at nucleotide 323 that alters the Cys-108 codon (TGT) to a Phe codon (TTT). Patient GM2009 was a compound heterozygote for the 5-bp deletion and the missense mutation. Both deletions introduce frameshifts with premature translation terminations resulting in instability of the XPAC mRNA and disruption of the putative zinc finger domain of the XPAC protein. The missense mutation also predicts disruption of the zinc finger domain of the XPAC protein. The expression study showed that the missense mutation does indeed causes loss of repair activity of the XPAC protein. We conclude that these 3 mutations are responsible for group A XP.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Three nonsense mutations responsible for group A xeroderma pigmentosumMutation Research/DNA Repair, 1992
- Characterization of a splicing mutation in group A xeroderma pigmentosum.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1990
- Analysis of a human DNA excision repair gene involved in group A xeroderma pigmentosum and containing a zinc-finger domainNature, 1990
- Molecular cloning of a mouse DNA repair gene that complements the defect of group-A xeroderma pigmentosum.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1989
- Primer-Directed Enzymatic Amplification of DNA with a Thermostable DNA PolymeraseScience, 1988
- Zinc fingers: Gilt by associationCell, 1988
- Base composition-independent hybridization in tetramethylammonium chloride: a method for oligonucleotide screening of highly complex gene libraries.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1985
- Isolation of biologically active ribonucleic acid from sources enriched in ribonucleaseBiochemistry, 1979
- DNA sequencing with chain-terminating inhibitorsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1977
- Defective Repair Replication of DNA in Xeroderma PigmentosumNature, 1968