Literature DB >> 8096362

Association of the widespread A149P hereditary fructose intolerance mutation with newly identified sequence polymorphisms in the aldolase B gene.

C C Brooks1, D R Tolan.   

Abstract

Hereditary fructose intolerance (HFI) is a potentially fatal autosomal recessive disease resulting from the catalytic deficiency of fructose 1-phosphate aldolase (aldolase B) in fructose-metabolizing tissues. The A149P mutation in exon 5 of the aldolase B gene, located on chromosome 9q21.3-q22.2, is widespread and the most common HFI mutation, accounting for 57% of HFI chromosomes. The possible origin of this mutation was studied by linkage to polymorphisms within the aldolase B gene. DNA fragments of the aldolase B gene containing the polymorphic marker loci from HFI patients homozygous for the A149P allele were amplified by PCR. Absolute linkage to a common PvuII RFLP allele was observed in 10 A149P homozygotes. In a more informative study, highly heterozygous polymorphisms were detected by direct sequence determination of a PCR-amplified aldolase B gene fragment. Two two-allele, single-base-pair polymorphisms, themselves in absolute linkage disequilibrium, in intron 8 (C at nucleotide 84 and A at nucleotide 105, or T at 84 and G at 105) of the aldolase B gene were identified. Mendelian segregation of these polymorphisms was confirmed in three families. Allele-specific oligonucleotide (ASO) hybridizations with probes for both sequence polymorphisms showed that 47% of 32 unrelated individuals were heterozygous at these loci; the calculated PIC value was .37. Finally, ASO hybridizations of PCR-amplified DNA from 15 HFI patients homozygous for the A149P allele with probes for these sequence polymorphisms revealed absolute linkage disequilibrium between the A149P mutation and the 84T/105G allele. These results are consistent with a single origin of the A149P allele and subsequent spread by genetic drift.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8096362      PMCID: PMC1682077     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Hum Genet        ISSN: 0002-9297            Impact factor:   11.025


  30 in total

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1.  Mutation analysis in Turkish patients with hereditary fructose intolerance.

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2.  Simple method for detection of mutations causing hereditary fructose intolerance.

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3.  Molecular Diagnosis of Hereditary Fructose Intolerance: Founder Mutation in a Community from India.

Authors:  Sunita Bijarnia-Mahay; Sireesha Movva; Neerja Gupta; Deepak Sharma; Ratna D Puri; Udhaya Kotecha; Renu Saxena; Madhulika Kabra; Neelam Mohan; Ishwar C Verma
Journal:  JIMD Rep       Date:  2015-01-18

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Authors:  C L James; P Rellos; M Ali; A F Heeley; T M Cox
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