| Literature DB >> 35163085 |
Gianluca Caridi1, Francesca Lugani1, Andrea Angeletti1, Monica Campagnoli2, Monica Galliano2, Lorenzo Minchiotti2.
Abstract
The human albumin gene, the most abundant serum protein, is located in the long arm of chromosome 4, near the centromere, position 4q11-3. It is divided by 14 intervening introns into 15 exons, the last of which is untranslated. To date, 74 nucleotide substitutions (mainly missense) have been reported, determining the circulating variants of albumin or pre-albumin. In a heterozygous state, this condition is known as alloalbuminaemia or bisalbuminaemia (OMIM # 103600). The genetic variants are not associated with disease, neither in the heterozygous nor in the homozygous form. Only the variants resulting in familial dysalbuminaemic hyperthyroxinaemia and hypertriiodothyroninaemia are of clinical relevance because affected individuals are at risk of inappropriate treatment or may have adverse drug effects. In 28 other cases, the pathogenic variants (mainly affecting splicing, nonsense, and deletions), mostly in the homozygous form, cause a premature stop in the synthesis of the protein and lead to the condition known as congenital analbuminaemia. In this review, we will summarize the current knowledge of genetic and molecular aspects, functional consequences and potential therapeutic uses of the variants. We will also discuss the molecular defects resulting in congenital analbuminaemia, as well as the biochemical and clinical features of this rare condition.Entities:
Keywords: congenital analbuminaemia; genetic variants; pharmacokinetics; stability: ligand binding; structural changes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35163085 PMCID: PMC8835714 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23031159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Effects of variants on albumin gene and their clinical consequences.
Genetic variants of human serum albumin a.
| # | Name | Nucleotide and | Functional Effects |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aminoacid Change (a) | |||
| 1 | Malmö I | c.67C>T | Malmö I: 3% pro-albumin, 30% Arg-ALB (due to aberrant signal peptide cleavage) with the rest as normal albumin (ALB A). |
| 2 | Lille | c.68G>A | |
| 3 | Christchurch | c.71G>A | |
| 4 | Takefu | c.71G>C | |
| 5 | Jaffna | c.71G>T | |
| 6 | Blenheim | c.74A>T | Blenheim: 10% pro-albumin, 38% Val-. Bremen: 20% Arg-ALB, 30% Val-. In both cases, the remaining is ALB A. |
| 7 | Larino | c.79C>T | Low in vivo stability. |
| 8 | Nagasaki-3 | c.81C>A/G | |
| 9 | Torino | c.250G>A | |
| 10 | Dalakarlia-1 | c.259G>A | CHO next to a Cys. High thermal stability. Decreased α-helical content. |
| 11 | FDH-T3 | c.269T>C | High T3 binding. |
| 12 | Vibo Valentia | c.316G>A | |
| 13 | Yanomama-2 | c.412C>G | Low bilirubin binding. |
| 14 | Nagoya | c.427G>A | |
| 15 | Tregasio | c.437T>A | Decreased plasma half-life. |
| 16 | Komagome-2 | c.455A>G | |
| 17 | Asola | c.491A>G | 20–25% variant. |
| 18 | Korea | c.593A>T | |
| 19 | Hawkes Bay | c.602G>T | 5% variant. Decreased α-helical content. Decreased plasma half-life. |
| 20 | Ilam | c.643G>A | Identified by a new high-resolution on-line reverse phase time-of-flight mass spectrometry procedure. |
| 21 | FDH-3 | c.724C>A | High free T4 andT3. Identified in a Canadian family of Bangladeshi extraction. |
| 22 | FDH-1 | c.725G>A | High T4 binding. Low warfarin binding. The most common causal variant in Caucasians. |
| 23 | FDH-2 | c.725G>C | High T4 binding. Low warfarin binding. Identified in Japanese and Swiss subjects. |
| 24 | FDH-4 | c.737G>T | High T4 binding. Identified in three unrelated African (Somali) families and one East European (Croatian) family. |
| 25 | Tradate-2 | c.745A>C | |
| 26 | Herborn | c.790A>G | |
| 27 | Skaane | c.875A>G | |
| 28 | Niigata | c.878A>G | High prostaglandin binding. |
| 29 | Caserta | c.900G>C | 60–70% variant |
| 30 | Tagliacozzo | c.1011G>T | Low drug binding. Low thermal stability. High progesterone binding. |
| 31 | Bergamo | c.1013A>G | |
| 32 | Brest | c.1013A>T | High fatty acid binding. |
| 33 | Orebro | c.1026C>G | |
| 34 | Redhill | c.[67C>T+1030G>A] | High fatty acid binding. |
| 35 | Roma | c.1033G>A | Low testosterone binding. |
| 36 | Sondrio | c.1069G>A | |
| 37 | Hiroshima-1 | c.1132G>A | |
| 38 | Coari I | c.1144G>A | |
| 39 | Trieste | c.1149G>T/C | Low thermal stability. |
| 40 | Parklands | c.1165G>C | Low drug binding. |
| 41 | Iowa City-1 | c.1166A>T | |
| 42 | Benkovac | c.1175A>G | |
| 43 | Naskapi | c.1186A>G | |
| 44 | Nagasaki-2 | c.1195G>A | |
| 45 | Milano slow | c.1195G>C | |
| 46 | Tochigi | c.1198G>A | |
| 47 | Malmo-3 | c.1198G>C | |
| 48 | Hiroshima-2 | c.1216G>A | |
| 49 | Liprizzi | c.1300C>T | High S-nitrosylation. |
| 50 | Dublin | c.1507G>A | |
| 51 | Casebrook | c.1552G>A | High fatty acid binding. Decreased α-helical content. |
| 52 | Vancouver | c.1573G>A | |
| 53 | Ortonovo | c.1585G>A | |
| 54 | Lyon | c.1601A>G | |
| 55 | Maddaloni | c.1669G>A | |
| 56 | Castel di Sangro | c.1678A>G | |
| 57 | Wuxi | c.1684A>G | |
| 58 | South Pacific | c.1690A>G | |
| 59 | Maku, (Wapishana) | c.1693A>G | High fatty acid binding. High thermal stability. |
| 60 | South Pacific | c.1708G>T | |
| 61 | Mexico | c.1721A>G | |
| 62 | Dalakarlia-2 | c.1721A>C | |
| 63 | Church Bay | c.1750A>G | |
| 64 | Fukuoka-1 | c.1759G>A | High fatty acid binding. Decreased α-helical content. |
| 65 | Osaka-1 | c.1765G>A | |
| 66 | Bazzano | c.1771delT | High fatty acid binding. Decreased α-helical content. |
| 67 | B | c.1780G>A | Low thermal stability. |
| 68 | Rugby Park | c.1785+1G>C | 8% variant. High fatty acid binding. |
| 69 | Banks Peninsula | c.1786-15T>A | |
| 70 | Milano fast (Mi/Fg) | c.1789A>G | This variant was recently identified in a 4-year-old Yemeni girl with growth hormone deficiency. |
| 71 | Vanves | c.1794A>T | |
| 72 | Kénitra | c.1794dupA | 15% variant. Low thermal stability. |
| 73 | Catania (Ge/Ct) | c.1810delC | |
| 74 | Venezia | c.1786_1814+1delinsAAAAT p.(?) | 30% variant. Low thermal stability. Increased α-helical content Decreased plasma half-life |
(a) Nucleotide change accession number (NM_000477.7); Aminoacid change accension number (NP_000468.1); to view the complete Table 1 see Supplementary Materials Table S1.
Variants causing analbuminemia in ALB gene.
| # | Name | Nucleotide Change (NM_000477.7) | Aminoacid Change (NP_000468.1) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Afula | c.1A>C | Start-loss |
| 2 | Baghdad | c.79+1G>A | Splicing defect |
| 3 | Madeira | C.138-2A>G | Splicing defect |
| 4 | Codogno | c.166C>T | p.Gln56Ter |
| 5 | Kayseri | c.228_229delAT | p.Val78Cysfs*2 |
| 6 | Amasya | c.229_230delTG | p.Val78Cysfs*2 |
| 7 | Treves | c.270+1G>T | Splicing defect |
| 8 | Bethesda | c.412C>T | p.Arg138ter |
| 9 | Erzurum | c.527delC | p.Pro176Argfs*65 |
| 10 | Zonguldak | c.597T>A | Splicing defect? |
| 11 | Nijmegen-2 | c.615G>A | Splicing defect |
| 12 | Vancouver | c.714-2A>G | Splicing defect |
| 13 | Seattle | c.714G>A | p.Trp238Ter |
| 14 | El Jadida | c.802G>T | p.Glu268Ter |
| 15 | Roma | c.872dupA | p.Asn291Lysfs*8 |
| 16 | Bologna | c.920delT | p.Leu307Argfs*23 |
| 17 | Ghazaouet | c.1098dup | p.Val367fs*12 |
| 18 | Roma-2 | c.1225C>T | p.Gln409Ter |
| 19 | Monastir | c.1275C>A | p.Tyr425Ter |
| 20 | Guimarães | c.1289+1G>A | p.Phe398Alafs*33 |
| 21 | Hama | c.1309A>T | p.Lys437Ter |
| 22 | Fondi | c.1427A>G | p.Tyr476Serfs*13 |
| 23 | Tripoli | c.1428+1G>T | Splicing defect |
| 24 | Bartin | c.1428+2T>C | p.Leu431Tyrfs*5 |
| 25 | Tubingen | c.1525C>T | p.Arg509Ter |
| 26 | Locust Valley | c.1610delT | p.Ile537Asnfs*21 |
| 27 | Safranbolu | c.1614_15delCA | p.Leu540Phefs*2 |
| 28 | Ankara | c.1652+1G>A | p.Leu477Cysfs*4 |
to view the complete Table 2 see Supplementary Materials Table S2.