| Literature DB >> 29361747 |
Masahide Yazaki1,2, Tsuneaki Yoshinaga3, Yoshiki Sekijima4,5, Fuyuki Kametani6, Nobuo Okumura7.
Abstract
Hereditary fibrinogen Aα-chain amyloidosis (Aα-chain amyloidosis) is a type of autosomal dominant systemic amyloidosis caused by mutations in fibrinogen Aα-chain gene (FGA). Patients with Aα-chain amyloidosis have been mainly reported in Western countries but have been rarely reported in Asia, with only five patients with Aα-chain amyloidosis being reported in Korea, China, and Japan. Clinically, the most prominent manifestation in Asian patients with Aα-chain amyloidosis is progressive nephropathy caused by excessive amyloid deposition in the glomeruli, which is similar to that observed in patients with Aα-chain amyloidosis in Western countries. In molecular features in Asian Aα-chain amyloidosis, the most common variant, E526V, was found in only one Chinese kindred, and other four kindred each had a different variant, which have not been identified in other countries. These variants are located in the C-terminal region (amino acid residues 517-555) of mature Aα-chain, which was similar to that observed in patients with Aα-chain amyloidosis in other countries. The precise number of Asian patients with Aα-chain amyloidosis is unclear. However, patients with Aα-chain amyloidosis do exist in Asian countries, and the majority of these patients may be diagnosed with other types of systemic amyloidosis.Entities:
Keywords: Ostertag-type amyloidosis; fibrinogen Aα-chain amyloidosis; hereditary renal amyloidosis; laser microdissection; proteomics analysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29361747 PMCID: PMC5796263 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19010320
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Sixteen amyloidogenic FGA mutations.
| Protein Variants | Clinical Features | Geographic Origin/Ethnicity | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| c.1627G > A | E524K | Nephropathy | Scottish | Rowczenio et al. [ |
| c.1633G > A | E526K | Nephropathy | Russian | Rowczenio et al. [ |
| c.1634A > T | E526V | Nephropathy | US, Europe, Brazil, China | Uemichi et al. [ |
| c.1670C > A | T538K | Nephropathy | Chinese | Gillmore et al. [ |
| c.1676A > T | E540V | Nephropathy | German | Gillmore et al. [ |
| c.1712C > A | P552H | Nephropathy | Afro-Caribbean | Gillmore et al. [ |
| c.1718G > T | R554L | Nephropathy | Mexico, Europe, US (Afro-American) | Benson et al. [ |
| c.1611delA (4886delA) | G519EfsX548 | Nephropathy | French | Rowczenio et al. [ |
| c.1619_1622delTTGT (4894_4897delTTGT) | F521SfsX547 | Nephropathy | North African | Rowczenio et al. [ |
| c.1620delT (4895delT) | F521LfsX548 | Nephropathy | French | Garnie et al. [ |
| c.1622delT (4897delT) | V522AfsX548 | Nephropathy | French | Hamidi et al. [ |
| c.1624_1627delAGTG (4899_4902delAGTG ) | S523RfsX547 | Nephropathy | Japanese | Yazaki et al. [ |
| c.1629delG (4904delG) | E524EfsX548 | Nephropathy | US | Uemichi et al. [ |
| c.1632delT (4907delT) | T525TfsX548 | Nephropathy | Chinese | Gillmore et al. [ |
| c.1606_1620del, 1619_1620insCA | M517_F521del insQSfsX548 | Nephropathy | Korean | Kang et al. [ |
| c.1720_1721delGGinsTT (5445_5446delGGinsTT) | G555F | Nephropathy | Norwegian | Rowczenio et al. [ |
Number of amino acids denotes the position in mature fibrinogen Aα-chain.
Figure 1Findings of renal biopsy (A,B) and duodenal mucosal biopsy (C,D) in a Japanese Aα-chain amyloidosis patient [14]. (A,C) Congo red staining. (B) Immunohistochemical staining with anti-human fibrinogen antibody. (D) Congo red staining under polarized light. Renal biopsy at the age of 32 years shows heavy amyloid deposits mainly in glomerulus with almost complete obliteration of the normal glomerular architecture (A). The positive staining is observed in immunohistochemistry (B). Duodenal mucosal biopsy at the age of 40 years demonstrates a small amount of amyloid deposits (arrows, (C)), showing typical apple-green birefringence under polarized light (arrows, (D)). Bars = 50 μm.
Figure 2Putative primary structure of amyloid fibril protein in a Japanese Aα-chain amyloidosis patient [14]. Amyloid protein in this patient is assumed to be composed of both wild-type sequence (residues 411–522) and an additional fragment (red italic letters) induced by the frameshift variant (residues 523–546). Black arrows denote tryptic peptides detected at laser microdissection (LMD) isolation of glomerular amyloid, and blue arrows denote Arg-C peptides detected at in-gel digestion on SDS-PAGE analysis of duodenal amyloid.
Figure 3The location of 16 amyloidogenic FGA variants. All amyloidogenic variants crowd in a quite limited portion from residue 517 to 555 of the mature Aα-chain. In eight frameshift variants, the C-terminal sequences resulted from frameshift variants (red italic letters) bear a close resemblance to each other, and the C-terminal peptides consisting of 24 amino acids (underline) are identical.
Therapeutic options in major systemic amyloidoses.
| Types of Systemic Amyloidosis | Precursor Proteins | Therapeutic Options | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hereditary ATTR amyloidosis | Transthyretin | Liver transplant, tafamidis, diflunisal, gene therapies | [ |
| Primary AL amyloidosis | Immunoglobulin light chain | Chemotherapies, stem cell transplantation | [ |
| Reactive AA amyloidosis | Serum amyloid A (SAA) | Control of underlying diseases, biologic agents | [ |
| Fibrinogen Aα-chain amyloidosis | Fibrinogen Aα-chain | Renal transplant, liver and renal transplant | [ |
| Apolipoprotein A-I amyloidosis | Apolipoprotein A-I | Renal transplant, liver and renal transplant | [ |
| Apolipoprotein A-II amyloidosis | Apolipoprotein A-II | Renal transplant | [ |