Abstract
CYP2D6 is a polymorphically expressed enzyme with two phenotypes. Poor metabolizers lack the enzyme caused by inactivating mutations in the CYP2D6 gene and extensive metabolizers have at least one active CYP2D6 gene. Extensive metabolizers with very high capacity for CYP2D6 dependent drug metabolisms are termed ultrarapid metabolizers and carry alleles with duplicated, multi duplicated or amplified CYP2D6 genes. In the present study, we examined the frequency of CYP2D6 gene duplications in a Danish population and validated a long polymerase chain reaction method for identification of ultrarapid metabolizers. Sixty individuals having a metabolic ratio for sparteine at or below 0.15 were selected and a control group of 53 individuals with a metabolic ratio between 0.16 and 12.4 was used. Based on EcoRI restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis, eight individuals were found with a duplicated CYP2D6 gene, whereas using a long polymerase chain reaction method, nine individuals with a 3.6 kb fragment indicative of two CYP2D6 genes in tandem were found among the 60 individuals with a low metabolic ratio. No gene duplication was found in the control group or in any individuals with a metabolic ratio > 0.14. Based on these results, we estimate the frequency of individuals with CYP2D6 duplication in the Danish population to be 0.8%, which is comparable to the frequency in the Swedish and the German populations, but considerably lower than in Spanish or African populations. We conclude that the long polymerase chain reaction assay is simple and reliable for detection of duplications of the CYP2D6 gene.