| Literature DB >> 27500280 |
Marjan Shakiba1, Fatemeh Mahjoub2, Hassan Fazilaty3, Fereshteh Rezagholizadeh4, Arghavan Shakiba5, Maryam Ziadlou6, William A Gahl7, Babak Behnam8.
Abstract
Hypermethioninemia may be benign, present as a nonspecific sign of nongenetic conditions such as liver failure and prematurity, or a severe, progressive inborn error of metabolism. Genetic causes of hypermethioninemia include mitochondrial depletion syndromes caused by mutations in the MPV17 and DGUOK genes and deficiencies of cystathionine β-synthase, methionine adenosyltransferase types I and III, glycine N-methyltransferase, S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase, citrin, fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase, and adenosine kinase. Here we present a 3-year old girl with a history of poor feeding, irritability, respiratory infections, cholestasis, congenital heart disease, neurodevelopmental delay, hypotonia, sparse hair, facial dysmorphisms, liver dysfunction, severe hypermethioninemia and mild homocystinemia. Genetic analysis of the adenosine kinase (ADK) gene revealed a previously unreported variant (c.479-480 GA>TG) resulting in a stop codon (p.E160X) in ADK. A methionine-restricted diet normalized the liver function test results and improved her hypotonia.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27500280 PMCID: PMC4975537 DOI: 10.12715/ard.2014.3.2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Rare Dis ISSN: 2385-5290
Patient’s test results at first and second admissions to our hospital
| Laboratory test | First admission | Second admission | Reference range |
|---|---|---|---|
| WBC | 7,600 (P: 49%, L: 46%) | 15,000 (P: 40%, L: 59%) | (6–17.5)×1000 |
| RBC | 3.6 ×10 | 4.54×10 | (3.70 – 5.30)×10 |
| HB (HCT) | 9.5 (32) | 12.6 (38.9) | 11.5–15 (35–45) |
| MCV | 92 | 92 | 77–86 |
| PLT | 271,000 | 223,000 | 150,000–400,000 |
| ESR | 1% | 3% | < 10% |
| VBG | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| BS | 86 | 58 | 60–140 (mg/dl) |
| BUN | 11 | 18 | 5–18 (mg/dl) |
| Cr | 0.4 | 0.3 | 0.2–0.6 (mg/dl) |
| Uric acid | - | 3.9 | 1.7–5.8 (mg/dl) |
| TG | 117 | - | 50–140 (mg/dl) |
| Cholesterol | 137 | - | 50–170 (mg/dl) |
| PT | 32, 13.5 | 12.8 | 9.5–13.5 |
| INR | 2.56, 1.07 | - | 0.8–1.2 |
| PTT | 36 | - | 28–38 |
| Total protein | 5.2 | - | 6.1–7.9 (g/L) |
| Albumin | 3.7 | - | 3.5–5 (g/L) |
| SGOT | 87, 3240, 468 | 3240, 159, 115, 1365, 399, 322 | 15–45 (IU/L) |
| SGPT | 272, 3320, 2080 | 3320, 254, 189, 965, 794, 307 | 15–45 (IU/L) |
| Gamma-GT | - | 147 | 5–32 (IU/L) |
| Bil (total) | 7, 4.4 | 7.9, 2.8, 1.69 | 0.2–1.2 (mg/dl) |
| Bil (direct) | 1.5, 0.4 | 5.6, 2, 1.34 | 0.1–0.4 (mg/dl) |
| ALP | 736 | 831 | 200–1200 (IU/L) |
| Ammonia | - | 62.1 | 15–58.8 (mg/dl) |
| Lactate | - | 11.8 | 7–20 (mg/dl) |
| Homocysteine | 8 | 29 | 5–16 (μmol/L) |
| CPK | - | 123 | 5–130 (IU/l) |
| Ferritin | >1000 | 1019 | 7–140 (ng/dl) |
| Plasma amino acids HPLC | |||
| Tyrosine | - | 89 | 10–145(μmol/L) |
| Methionine | - | 1322 | 12–40 (μmol/L) |
Urine carbohydrate and urine amino acid chromatographies were both checked and showed a normal pattern at first admission.
CBC, cell blood count; WBC, white blood cell count; P, polymorphonuclear; L, Lymphocyte; HB, hemoglobin; HCT, hematocrit; MCV, mean cell volume; PLT, platelet; VBG: venous blood gases; BUN, blood urea nitrogen; Cr, creatinine; TG, triglycerides; PT, prothrombin time; INR, international normalized ratio; PTT, partial thromboplastin time; SGOT, serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase; SGPT, serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase; Gamma GT, gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase; BIL, bilirubin; ALP, alkaline phosphatase; CPK, creatine phosphokinase; HPLC, high performance liquid chromatography.
Figure 1Histopathology examination of hepatocytes. A: Liver tissue with expansion of the portal areas by infiltration of inflammatory cells. B: Trichrome stain showing bands of fibrous tissue forming portal-portal bridges (stage 4). Hepatocytes show anisonucleosis and double nuclei. Foci of confluent necrosis were seen. C: Portal area with infiltration of lymphocytes, some eosinophils, and few neutrophils resulting in interface. Foci of the infiltration of intralobular inflammatory cells were seen and the bile duct is unremarkable.
ADK gene-specific primers
| Primer symbols | Sequences |
|---|---|
| ADK-1F | GTGAGCTGGCACGAGACAC |
| ADK-1R | ATGAAAAGTGCGGAGGGAAC |
| ADK-2F | TCTGCAACCTTGACACCATC |
| ADK-2R | TTCCCAAGGAAAACTGTACTCAG |
| ADK-3F | CCTTTCAGTTCCTGGAGTGG |
| ADK-3R | TGATCCACCGGAGTAAGACC |
| ADK-4F | TGACCTCCATTTGGCAATC |
| ADK-4R | TCCCAATTCAAATGAACAAAAC |
| ADK-5F | TTGAAATCCCATTCATAACAGC |
| ADK-5R | CAAGGCATTGAGCAAGCTATC |
| ADK-6F | CATAGATGCCTCAGAAAGTTCTC |
| ADK-6R | GGTTGGCAAGCACCTATG |
| ADK-7F | CTGAGAGTGACTGTGGAGATGG |
| ADK-7R | TGTGGTCATAGTAACAGGACAGG |
| ADK-8F | TGTGTTGACATTAGGCTGCC |
| ADK-8R | ATGACGACTGCCAAGTTTCC |
| ADK-9F | GGGTTCCTTGGAAGTCACTG |
| ADK-9R | TTGATTGACAAAATCCCCAAG |
| ADK-10F | TACTTGCAGATGATTTTGCACC |
| ADK-10R | CATTTAAGCCTGAAGGGCTATG |
| ADK-11F | ATATTGGTCTGACCCAATATGAC |
| ADK-11R | TGACAAGTTTTTGTTTGTGTCC |
Figure 2Sequencing result for ADK exon 6. A: Patient’s sequence aligned to published template (NM_001123) using Clustal Omega software. B: Corresponding chromatogram (Chromas software version 2.4.1) for the region containing alterations. Red arrows show the altered nucleotides.