Functional analysis of mutations in the OCTN2 transporter causing primary carnitine deficiency: Lack of genotype-phenotype correlation
- 27 October 2000
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Hindawi Limited in Human Mutation
- Vol. 16 (5) , 401-407
- https://doi.org/10.1002/1098-1004(200011)16:5<401::aid-humu4>3.0.co;2-j
Abstract
Primary carnitine deficiency is an autosomal recessive disorder of fatty acid oxidation caused by defective carnitine transport. This disease is caused by mutations in the novel organic cation transporter OCTN2 (SLC22A5 gene). The disease can present early in life with hypoketotic hypoglycemia or later in life with skeletal myopathy or cardiomyopathy. To determine whether the variation in phenotypic severity is due to mutations retaining residual function, we extended mutational analysis of OCTN2 to four additional European families with primary carnitine deficiency. Three patients were homozygous for novel missense mutations (R169W, G242V, A301D). The fourth patient was compound heterozygous for R169W and W351R substitutions. Stable expression of all the mutations in CHO cells confirmed that all mutations abolished carnitine transport, with the exception of the A301D mutation in which residual carnitine transport was 2–3% of the value measured in cells expressing the normal OCTN2 cDNA. Analysis of the patients characterized in molecular detail by our laboratory failed to indicate a correlation between residual carnitine transport and severity of the phenotype or age at presentation. Hum Mutat 16:401–407, 2000.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Two novel missense mutations of the OCTN2 gene (W283R and V446F) in a patient with primary systemic carnitine deficiencyHuman Mutation, 1999
- Carnitine Transporter OCTN2 Mutations in Systemic Primary Carnitine Deficiency: A Novel Arg169Gln Mutation and a Recurrent Arg282ter Mutation Associated with an Unconventional Splicing AbnormalityBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1999
- Primary systemic carnitine deficiency is caused by mutations in a gene encoding sodium ion-dependent carnitine transporterNature Genetics, 1999
- Defective urinary carnitine transport in heterozygotes for primary carnitine deficiencyGenetics in Medicine, 1998
- Defects in Na+/glucose cotransporter (SGLT1) trafficking and function cause glucose-galactose malabsorptionNature Genetics, 1996
- Canine brain glucose transporter 3: Gene sequence, phylogenetic comparisons and analysis of functional sitesGene, 1996
- Clinical and biochemical findings in a Spanish boy with primary carnitine deficiencyJournal of Inherited Metabolic Disease, 1995
- Facilitative glucose transportersEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1994
- Primary carnitine deficiencyNeurology, 1991
- Cardiomyopathy associated with carnitine loss in kidneys and small intestineEuropean Journal of Pediatrics, 1988