Anuradha Deorukhkar1, Anuja Kulkarni1, Prabhakar Kedar2. 1. Department of Haematogenetics, ICMR-National Institute of Immunohaematology, Indian Council of Medical Research, 13th Floor, New Multi-Storeyed Building, King Edward Memorial (KEM.) Hospital Campus, Parel, Mumbai, 400012, India. 2. Department of Haematogenetics, ICMR-National Institute of Immunohaematology, Indian Council of Medical Research, 13th Floor, New Multi-Storeyed Building, King Edward Memorial (KEM.) Hospital Campus, Parel, Mumbai, 400012, India. kedarps2002@yahoo.com.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Methemoglobin is the reduced form of haemoglobin that is normally found in the blood in levels < 1%. Methemoglobinemia can occur as a congenital or acquired disease. Two types of recessive congenital methaemoglobinemia (RCM) are caused by the NADH-dependent cytochrome b5 reductase enzyme deficiency of the CYB5R3 gene. RCM-I is characterized by higher methaemoglobin levels (> 2 g/dL), causing only cyanosis, whereas RCM-II is associated with cyanosis with neurological impairment. METHODS: Routine haematological investigations were done by standard method. The methaemoglobin level was evaluated by the potassium ferricyanide assay. NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase (cytb5r) enzyme activities were measured by standard methods, and molecular analysis was performed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) followed by DNA sequencing. The interpretation of mutation effect and the molecular modeling were performed by using specific software DEEP VIEW SWISS-PDB VIEWER and Pymol molecular graphics program. RESULTS: The present study discovered three novel homozygous pathogenic variants of CYB5R3 causing RCM I and II in four unrelated Indian patients. In patient-1 and patient-2 of RCM type I caused due to novel c.175C>T (p.Arg59Cys) and other reported c.469T>C (p.Phe157Ser) missense pathogenic variants respectively, whereas patient-3 and patient-4 presented with the RCM type II are related to developmental delay with cyanosis since birth due to a novel homozygous (g.25679_25679delA) splice-site deletion and novel homozygous c.824_825insC (p.Pro278ThrfsTer367) single nucleotide insertion. The CYB5R3 transcript levels were estimated by qRT-PCR in the splice-site deletion, which was 0.33fold of normal healthy control. The insertion of nucleotide C resulted in a frameshift of termination codon are associated with neurological impairment. CONCLUSIONS: Molecular diagnosis of RCM can help to conduct genetic counselling for novel mutations and, subsequently, prenatal diagnosis of high-risk genetic disorders.
BACKGROUND: Methemoglobin is the reduced form of haemoglobin that is normally found in the blood in levels < 1%. Methemoglobinemia can occur as a congenital or acquired disease. Two types of recessive congenital methaemoglobinemia (RCM) are caused by the NADH-dependent cytochrome b5 reductase enzyme deficiency of the CYB5R3 gene. RCM-I is characterized by higher methaemoglobin levels (> 2 g/dL), causing only cyanosis, whereas RCM-II is associated with cyanosis with neurological impairment. METHODS: Routine haematological investigations were done by standard method. The methaemoglobin level was evaluated by the potassium ferricyanide assay. NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase (cytb5r) enzyme activities were measured by standard methods, and molecular analysis was performed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) followed by DNA sequencing. The interpretation of mutation effect and the molecular modeling were performed by using specific software DEEP VIEW SWISS-PDB VIEWER and Pymol molecular graphics program. RESULTS: The present study discovered three novel homozygous pathogenic variants of CYB5R3 causing RCM I and II in four unrelated Indian patients. In patient-1 and patient-2 of RCM type I caused due to novel c.175C>T (p.Arg59Cys) and other reported c.469T>C (p.Phe157Ser) missense pathogenic variants respectively, whereas patient-3 and patient-4 presented with the RCM type II are related to developmental delay with cyanosis since birth due to a novel homozygous (g.25679_25679delA) splice-site deletion and novel homozygous c.824_825insC (p.Pro278ThrfsTer367) single nucleotide insertion. The CYB5R3 transcript levels were estimated by qRT-PCR in the splice-site deletion, which was 0.33fold of normal healthy control. The insertion of nucleotide C resulted in a frameshift of termination codon are associated with neurological impairment. CONCLUSIONS: Molecular diagnosis of RCM can help to conduct genetic counselling for novel mutations and, subsequently, prenatal diagnosis of high-risk genetic disorders.
Authors: Emilio Siendones; Sara SantaCruz-Calvo; Alejandro Martín-Montalvo; María V Cascajo; Julia Ariza; Guillermo López-Lluch; José M Villalba; Cécile Acquaviva-Bourdain; Emmanuel Roze; Michel Bernier; Rafael de Cabo; Plácido Navas Journal: Antioxid Redox Signal Date: 2014-02-28 Impact factor: 8.401