| Literature DB >> 30131866 |
Tomoko Lee1, Maiko Misaki1, Hideki Shimomura1, Yasuhiko Tanaka1, Satoru Yoshida2, Kei Murayama3, Kimitoshi Nakamura4, Ryoji Fujiki5, Osamu Ohara5, Hideo Sasai6, Toshiyuki Fukao6, Yasuhiro Takeshima1.
Abstract
An 18-month-old boy was diagnosed with late-onset ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency. Genetic analysis revealed a mosaic frameshift mutation (p.Q279fs) in the OTC gene. Despite the presence of a null mutation, he exhibited a milder phenotype, suggesting that the wild-type allele could rescue the function of OTC. The presence of mosaicism has great effects on the clinical phenotype and recurrence-risk assessment, which should be taken into consideration for genetic counseling.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30131866 PMCID: PMC6095930 DOI: 10.1038/s41439-018-0022-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genome Var ISSN: 2054-345X
Fig. 1Nucleotide sequence and semiquantitative analysis of the OTC gene.
a The results of a direct sequencing analysis of the OTC gene using genomic DNA from lymphocytes of the patient and his mother. Upper figure: Direct sequencing analysis revealed two different types of alleles: the wild-type and the mutant alleles with a frameshift mutation (c.834_840delCCAGGCT). Lower figure: Only the wild-type allele was identified in his mother. b Semiquantitative analysis using the GeneMapper software for lymphocytes and oral mucosa. The mutant allele was in 60.38 and 65.19% of the lymphocytes and oral mucosa cells, respectively
Patients with OTCD caused by somatic mosaicism
| Patient | Sex | Mutation in the | Phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | Male | exon 5–7 (8) deletion | Late | Maddalena et al.[ |
| #2 | Male | exon7–9 deletion | Late | Legius et al.[ |
| #3 | Male | c.444 G > C (p.L148F) | Asymptomatic | Komaki et al.[ |
| #4 | Male | c.386+1 G > T | Late | Qin et al.[ |
| #5 | Male | c.1046 T > C (p.L349P) | Asymptomatic | Qin et al.[ |
| #6 | Male | c.834_840delCCAGGCT (p.Q279fs) | Late | Current patient |