GAUCHER DISEASE - MOLECULAR HETEROGENEITY AND PHENOTYPE-GENOTYPE CORRELATIONS
- 1 August 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 45 (2) , 212-225
Abstract
Gaucher disease (GD) is the most prevalent lysosomal storage disease. This autosomal recessive trait results from the defective activity of acid .beta.-glucosidase (.beta.-Glc). Four different exonic point mutations have been identified as causal alleles for GD. To facilitate screening for these alleles, assays were developed using allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization to amplified genomic DNA sequences. Specifically, intron bases flanking exons 5, 9, and 10 were determined, and conditions for PCR amplification of these exons were obtained. Two different procedures were developed to distinguish signals obtained from the structural .beta.-Glc gene exons and those from the pseudogene. These procedures were used to determine the distribution of all known GD alleles in a population of 44 affected patients of varying phenotypes and ethnicity. The high frequency of one of the exon 9 mutations in Ashkenazi Jewish GD type 1 patients was confirmed, and, in addition, this mutation was present in ethnically diverse non-Jewish type 1 GD patients. Homozygotes (N = 5) for this allele were mildly affected older individuals, and this mutant allele was not found in any patient with neuronopathic disease. The exon 10 mutation was confirmed as the predominant allele in types 2 and 3 GD. However, several type 1 GD patients, including one of Ashkenazi-Jewish heritage, also were heterozygous for this allele. The presence of this allele in type 1 patients did not correlate with the severity of clinical symptoms. The second exon 9 mutation and the exon 5 mutation were rare, since they occurred only heterozygously either in one type 2 GD patient or in two related Ashkenazi-Jewish GD patients, respectively. Although most GD patients (38 of 44) had at least one of the known mutant alleles, 57% were heterozygotes for only one of these mutations. Fourteen percent of patients were negative for all mutations. A total of 73% of GD patients had at least one unknown allele. The varying clinical phenotypes and ethnic orgins of these incompletely characterized patients suggest that multiple other GD alleles exist.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Studies on transformation of Escherichia coli with plasmidsPublished by Elsevier ,2006
- CHARACTERIZATION OF MUTATIONS IN GAUCHER PATIENTS BY CDNA CLONING1989
- The human glucocerebrosidase gene and pseudogene: Structure and evolutionGenomics, 1989
- Gaucher Disease Type 1: Cloning and Characterization of a cDNA Encoding Acid β-Glucosidase from an Ashkenazi Jewish PatientDNA, 1988
- Structural Analysis of the Human Glucocerebrosidase GenesDNA, 1988
- Enzymatic Amplification of β-Globin Genomic Sequences and Restriction Site Analysis for Diagnosis of Sickle Cell AnemiaScience, 1985
- Genetic heterogeneity in Gaucher disease: Physicokinetic and immunologic studies of the residual enzyme in cultured fibroblasts from non‐neuronopathic and neuronopathic patientsAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics, 1985
- Supercoil Sequencing: A Fast and Simple Method for Sequencing Plasmid DNADNA, 1985
- GAUCHER DISEASE TYPE-1, TYPE-2, AND TYPE-3 - DIFFERENTIAL MUTATIONS OF THE ACID BETA-GLUCOSIDASE ACTIVE-SITE IDENTIFIED WITH CONDURITOL-B EPOXIDE DERIVATIVES AND SPHINGOSINE1985
- A rapid alkaline extraction procedure for screening recombinant plasmid DNANucleic Acids Research, 1979