| Literature DB >> 27834067 |
Rihwa Choi1, Hyung Doo Park2, Mina Yang1, Chang Seok Ki1, Soo Youn Lee1, Jong Won Kim1, Junghan Song3, Yun Sil Chang4,5, Won Soon Park4,6.
Abstract
Diagnosis of the urea cycle disorder (USD) carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase 1 (CPS1) deficiency (CPS1D) based on only the measurements of biochemical intermediary metabolites is not sufficient to properly exclude other UCDs with similar symptoms. We report the first Korean CPS1D patient using whole exome sequencing (WES). A four-day-old female neonate presented with respiratory failure due to severe metabolic encephalopathy with hyperammonemia (1,690 μmol/L; reference range, 11.2-48.2 μmol/L). Plasma amino acid analysis revealed markedly elevated levels of alanine (2,923 μmol/L; reference range, 131-710 μmol/L) and glutamine (5,777 μmol/L; reference range, 376-709 μmol/L), whereas that of citrulline was decreased (2 μmol/L; reference range, 10-45 μmol/L). WES revealed compound heterozygous pathogenic variants in the CPS1 gene: one novel nonsense pathogenic variant of c.580C>T (p.Gln194*) and one known pathogenic frameshift pathogenic variant of c.1547delG (p.Gly516Alafs*5), which was previously reported in Japanese patients with CPS1D. We successfully applied WES to molecularly diagnose the first Korean patient with CPS1D in a clinical setting. This result supports the clinical applicability of WES for cost-effective molecular diagnosis of UCDs.Entities:
Keywords: CPS1; Carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase 1 deficiency; Hyperammonemia; Urea cycle disorders; Whole exome sequencing
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Year: 2017 PMID: 27834067 PMCID: PMC5107619 DOI: 10.3343/alm.2017.37.1.58
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Lab Med ISSN: 2234-3806 Impact factor: 3.464