| Literature DB >> 11734061 |
C Le Maréchal1, J M Chen, I Quéré, O Raguénès, C Férec, J Auroux.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: R122, the primary autolysis site of the human cationic trypsinogen (PRSS1), constitutes an important "self-destruct" or "fail-safe" defensive mechanism against premature trypsin activation within the pancreas. Disruption of this site by a missense mutation, R122H, was found to cause hereditary pancreatitis. In addition to a c.365G>A (CGC>CAC) single nucleotide substitution, a c.365 through 366GC>AT (CGC>CAT) gene conversion event in exon 3 of PRSS1 was also found to result in a R122H mutation. This imposes a serious concern on the genotyping of pancreatitis by a widely used polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism assay, which could only detect the commonest c.365G>A variant.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11734061 PMCID: PMC60523 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2156-2-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genet ISSN: 1471-2156 Impact factor: 2.797
Figure 1Detection of three mutational events in exon 3 of PRSS1 resulting in a disruption of the R122 primary autolysis site of human cationic trypsinogen. Left panel: denaturing high performance liquid chromatography (DHPLC) profile of the mutant compared with the wild type sequence. Right panel: direct DNA sequencing of independently amplified polymerase chain reaction products. Mutations are indicated by arrows. A: c.365G>A(CGC>CAC; R122H); B: c.365~366GC>AT (CGC>CAT; R122H); C: c.364C>T (CGC>TGC; R122C). Refer to Table 1 for a summary of these mutational events.
The three different mutational events resulting in a disruption of the R122 primary autolysis site of the human cationic trypsinogen
| cDNA change(s) | Location | Codon change | Amino acid change | Designation | Comments | Reference(s) |
| c.365G>A | Exon3 | CGC>CAC | Arg>His at 122 | R122H | At CpG (antisense strand) | 2,6 |
| C.365~366GC>AT | Exon3 | CGC>CAT | Arg>His at 122 | R122H | Gene conversion | 5,6 |
| C.364C>T | Exon3 | CGC>TGC | Arg>Cys at 122 | R122C | At CpG (sense strand) | This study |